39+ PNLE Psychiatric Nursing Nursing Questions Study Guide and Review Materials
Introduction
Psychiatric Nursing can feel like wrestling with shadows. It's this nebulous mix of patient behavior, therapeutic communication, and mental health theories. But here's the kicker: PNLE is going to probe your understanding of these in very real ways. While most students might focus on pharmacology or pathophysiology, psychiatric nursing tests a different skill set entirely. Think less about what's written in the textbook and more about how you'd handle a real-life situation.
The questions often involve scenarios where you identify the best communication technique or the most effective nursing intervention. Expect situations with anxious patients, confused clients, or even someone experiencing hallucinations. These are not just ‘tick-the-right-box’ questions; they need thoughtful reasoning. Dive into the mind of the patient and understand the ‘why’ behind their behaviors.
Stick with me, and I'll help you unravel this topic, making you more confident than before. Let's tackle these challenges methodically.
Key concepts
What to expect on the PNLE
You can expect about 4 to 7 questions on psychiatric nursing per PNLE exam. These focus on application and clinical scenarios more than straight recall. You’ll see questions that mix therapeutic communication with specific disorders, making synthesis just as crucial as memory.
- Look out for questions featuring scenarios around patient safety, particularly those involving suicidal ideation or unpredictable behavior.
- Watch for queries about responding to hallucinations or symptoms of major personality disorders—these are common traps.
- The sneaky pattern? Questions that provide symptom lists. You must determine the disorder contextually. Their trap answers are those that fit part of the symptoms but miss the key diagnosis.
In particular, know your way around strategies for handling anxiety disorders and communication techniques in stressful situations.
Study tips
- Use Mnemonics for Therapeutic Communication: Remember SOLER—Sit squarely, Open posture, Lean forward, Eye contact, and Relax. This helps nail communication questions.
- Create a Disorder Comparison Table: Make a table with disorders on one side, symptoms and interventions on the other. This sharpens your diagnostic skills.
- Draw Mind Maps: For anxiety disorders and personality disorders, map symptoms, causes, and interventions. Making connections improves recall.
- Watch Real-Life Patient Videos: Find videos of patient interactions. See therapeutic communication in action. It’s far more effective than just reading about it.
- Do Practice Questions: Head to tangerine. Drill the different mediums and hards. Reflect on the rationales. It’s the best way to identify patterns and sharpen your skills.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Misreading Scenario Questions: "You see a question about a patient who refuses to eat. You assume it’s anorexia. But the question frames it within depression, not eating disorders. The answer focuses on mood, not diet. This mistake is about overlooking the context."
- Confusing Ailments and Symptoms: "You get a question about hallucinations and anxiety. It’s easy to think hallucinations are anxiety-related. But the correct answer is they’re linked to psychosis, like schizophrenia."
- Overassuming Safety Practices: "Presented with a question about a violent outburst, you think sedation. But safety plans are about de-escalation first. This question tests understanding of patient rights and safety."
- Mistaking Personality Disorders: "With a scenario detailing manipulative behavior, you might want to label it as Borderline Personality Disorder. But it’s actually Antisocial, highlighting a disregard for others. Nuance is key."
Try a question
A real Psychiatric Nursing question from our bank. Give it a shot.
A nurse in a Philippine psychiatric facility notices that a patient with chronic schizophrenia has been experiencing difficulty performing activities of daily living despite medication compliance. The nurse considers referring the patient to another member of the interdisciplinary team. Which healthcare professional is most appropriate for this referral?
Patients with chronic schizophrenia often experience persistent deficits in cognitive and functional abilities, even when their symptoms are well-managed with antipsychotic medications. Difficulty performing activities of daily living (ADLs), such as grooming, bathing, dressing, and managing household tasks, is a common challenge in this population. The nurse’s recognition of these deficits is a key component of holistic, patient-centered care.
The most appropriate referral in this scenario is to an occupational therapist. Occupational therapists are specifically trained to assess and address difficulties in ADLs. Their role is to help patients develop, recover, or maintain the skills needed for independent living and self-care. Through individualized interventions, occupational therapists can teach adaptive techniques, recommend assistive devices, and modify the environment to support the patient’s functional independence. This aligns with evidence-based psychiatric nursing practice, which emphasizes maximizing patient autonomy and quality of life.
Let’s review why the other options are not the best fit:
| Option | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Psychiatrist | Psychiatrists focus on diagnosis, medication management, and overall psychiatric treatment. While they can adjust medications or address symptom relapse, they are not specialists in functional rehabilitation or ADL training. |
| Social worker | Social workers assist with psychosocial needs, discharge planning, and connecting patients to community resources. They do not provide direct interventions for ADL deficits. |
| Clinical psychologist | Psychologists provide therapy and psychological assessment, focusing on cognitive, emotional, and behavioral issues. They do not specialize in functional skills training or ADL support. |
| Occupational therapist | Occupational therapists are experts in assessing and improving ADLs and functional abilities, making them the most appropriate referral for this patient’s needs. |
Clinical Pearl: Remember the role of the occupational therapist by associating "occupation" with daily activities and routines. If a patient struggles with self-care or basic daily tasks, occupational therapy is the go-to referral.
This question tests the nurse’s ability to apply knowledge of the interdisciplinary team and match patient needs with the correct resource. Understanding each team member’s scope of practice is essential for safe, effective, and collaborative psychiatric care.
Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing. Udan's Comprehensive Nursing Lecture Review Book. Videbeck: Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing. Philippine Nursing Licensure Exam Review Materials.
More Psychiatric Nursing questions
82+ questions available. Sign up to practice all of them.
According to the document, what was the Department of Health's bed capacity for mental disorders nationwide?
A nurse in a community health clinic is assessing a 28-year-old client with a history of schizophrenia who has become increasingly withdrawn, is reporting new auditory hallucinations, and has missed several doses of medication. The client is calm, cooperative, and denies suicidal or homicidal thoughts. Based on the modern management approach for persons with mental illness, which plan should the nurse implement?
A community health nurse is planning a mental health outreach program for adults with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. During a focus group, several participants report being denied employment, avoided by neighbors, and treated unfairly in housing and health care because of their diagnosis. When documenting the program’s impact using public health terms, the nurse identifies these outcomes as which type of mental health burden?
Practice questions
Q: A 40-year-old male patient diagnosed with Antisocial Personality Disorder exhibits manipulation and deceitful behavior. What is the nurse’s best response?
Answer: C. The best approach for dealing with manipulation in Antisocial Personality Disorder is setting boundaries and enforcing rules. Response A allows the behavior to persist, while B and D do not address the need for structure. View more questions
Q: A nurse is caring for an adolescent with a new diagnosis of Generalized Anxiety Disorder. Which intervention is most appropriate?
Answer: B. Establishing a consistent daily routine helps manage anxiety. Avoidance and isolation (A and D) worsen anxiety. Pharmacotherapy (C) should be a secondary intervention to lifestyle changes. View more questions
Q: A patient experiencing auditory hallucinations states that the voices tell them to harm their roommate. What is the nurse's priority action?
Answer: C. Safety is the top priority in potential harm situations. A and D minimize the seriousness, and B does not directly address safety concerns. View more questions
Q: During a group therapy session, one patient begins to dominate the conversation. Which intervention by the nurse is most appropriate?
Answer: C. Encouraging other group members to share promotes a balanced group experience. A allows domination, B may escalate tension, and D is unnecessarily disruptive. View more questions
Q: What is an effective strategy for a nurse to use when a patient with OCD repeatedly asks if a door is locked?
Answer: C. Providing a routine with limits can help manage the compulsive behavior. A reinforces compulsions, B does not stop the behavior, D is dismissive. View more questions
References and further reading
- Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing: Scope and Standards of Practice (3rd Edition) guideline
This publication outlines the essential roles, responsibilities, and standards for psychiatric-mental health nurses, serving as a foundational guide for practice. - Nursing: Mental Health and Community Concepts educational
An open educational resource providing comprehensive coverage of mental health and community nursing concepts, tailored for prelicensure nursing students. - Varcarolis' Manual of Psychiatric Nursing Care: An Interprofessional Approach (7th Edition) textbook
A clinical reference offering evidence-based guidelines for psychiatric nursing care, including DSM-5 criteria and individualized care planning. - Guidelines on Mental Health Nursing guideline
These guidelines provide a framework for best practices in mental health nursing, aiming to harmonize care standards globally. - APNA Undergraduate Faculty Toolkit educational
A resource designed to assist nursing educators in teaching psychiatric-mental health content effectively to undergraduate students. - Mental Health and Psychiatric Nursing Study Guides educational
A collection of study guides and resources covering various topics in mental health and psychiatric nursing, useful for exam preparation. - International Journal of Mental Health Nursing journal
A peer-reviewed journal publishing research and developments in the field of mental health nursing.