1 / 26

Chapter 6 Therapeutic Communication

Chapter 6 Therapeutic Communication. Communication. Exchange of information Verbal Content: literal words spoken Context: environment, circumstances, situation in which communication occurs Nonverbal Process: all messages used to give meaning, context to message

Download Presentation

Chapter 6 Therapeutic Communication

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6Therapeutic Communication

  2. Communication • Exchange of information • Verbal • Content: literal words spoken • Context: environment, circumstances, situation in which communication occurs • Nonverbal • Process: all messages used to give meaning, context to message • Congruent or incongruent message

  3. Therapeutic Communication • Interpersonal interactions; focus on patient’s needs • Need for privacy • Encompasses goals that facilitate the nursing process

  4. Therapeutic Communication (cont.) • Goals of therapeutic communication • Establish therapeutic relationship • Identify patient’s most important concerns; assess patient’s perceptions • Facilitate patient’s expression of emotions • Teach patient, family necessary self-care skills • Recognize patient’s needs; implement interventions to address patient’s needs • Guide patient toward acceptable solutions

  5. Therapeutic Communication (cont.) • Touch • Five types: functional/professional; social–polite; friendship–warmth; love–intimacy; sexual–arousal • Comforting and supportive; also possible invasion of intimate and personal space

  6. Question • Tell whether the following statement is true or false? • A distance of 2 feet between the nurse and patient is adequate for promoting comfortable therapeutic communication.

  7. Answer • False • Rationale: For effective therapeutic communication, a distance of 3 to 6 feet between the nurse and patient would be most appropriate.

  8. Verbal Communication Skills • Need for concrete, not abstract, messages • Techniques (see Table 6.1) • Exploring, focusing, restating, reflecting promotes discussion of feelings or concerns in more depth • Other techniques useful in focusing or clarifying what is being said • Feedback via making an observation or presenting reality

  9. Verbal Communication Skills (cont.) • Avoidance of nontherapeutic techniques (see Table 6.2) • Advising, belittling, challenging, probing, reassuring • Interpretation of signals or cues • Overt • Covert (themes, metaphors, proverbs, clichés)

  10. Nonverbal Communication Skills • Facial expression • Expressive • Impassive • Confusing • Body language • Open body position • Closed body position

  11. Nonverbal Communication Skills (cont.) • Vocal cues • Eye contact • Silence

  12. Therapeutic Communication (cont.) • Respect for boundaries • Distance zones • Intimate (0 to 18 inches) • Personal (18 to 36 inches) • Social (4 to 12 feet) • Public (12 to 25 feet) • Therapeutic communication: most comfortable when nurse and patient are 3 to 6 feet apart

  13. Therapeutic Communication (cont.) • Active listening (concentrating exclusively on what patient says) • Active observation (watching nonverbal actions as speaker communicates)

  14. Understanding Meaning, Context, and Spirituality of Communication • Meaning: usually more meaning than just spoken word • Context • Validation with client of verbal, nonverbal information • Who, what, when, how, why

  15. Understanding Meaning, Context, and Spirituality of Communication (cont.) • Spirituality • Self-awareness of own spiritual beliefs • Need for objectivity and nonjudgmental attitude about patient’s beliefs

  16. Cultural Considerations • Need for awareness of cultural differences • Speech patterns, habits • Styles of speech, expression • Eye contact • Touch • Concept of time • Health, health care

  17. Question • Which of the following would be a nontherapeutic communication technique? • A. Reassuring • B. Reflecting • C. Focusing • D. Exploring

  18. Answer • A. Reassuring • Rationale: Reassuring is a nontherapeutic technique because it attempts to dispel the patient’s feelings. • Reflecting, focusing, and exploring are examples of therapeutic communication techniques.

  19. Therapeutic Communication Session • Goals • Establishing rapport • Identifying issues of concern • Being empathetic, genuine, caring, unconditionally accepting of the person • Understanding patient’s perception • Exploring patient’s thoughts, feelings • Developing problem-solving skills • Promoting patient’s evaluation of solutions

  20. Therapeutic Communication Session (cont.) • Initiation of session • Introduction • Establishment of contract for relationship • Identification of major concern • Nondirective role (broad-opening, open-ended questions) • Directive role (direct yes/no questions; usually for patients with suicidal thoughts, in crisis, or who are out of touch with reality)

  21. Therapeutic Communication Session (cont.) • Proper phrasing of questions • Clarification • Identification of patient’s avoidance of anxiety-producing topic • Guidance in problem-solving, empowerment to change

  22. Assertive Communication • Expression of positive and negative feelings/ideas in open, honest, direct way • Calm, specific factual statements • Focus on “I” statements • Possible responses • Aggressive • Passive–aggressive • Passive • Assertive

  23. Community-Based Care • Nurses increasingly caring for high-risk patients in homes; families becoming more responsible for primary prevention • Therapeutic communication techniques and skills are essential for caring for patients in the community. • Increased self-awareness, knowledge needed about cultural differences; sensitivity to beliefs, behaviors, feelings of others • Collaboration with patient and family as well as other health-care providers

  24. Question • Tell whether the following statement is true or false? • Assertive communication focuses on identifying negative feelings.

  25. Answer • False • Rationale: Assertive communication focuses on the expression of positive and negative feelings or ideas in an open, honest, direct manner.

  26. Self-Awareness Issues • Nonverbal communication: as important as verbal • Therapeutic communication influential in effectiveness of interventions • Awareness of own communication is first step in improving communication • Ask for feedback from colleagues • Examine own communication skills

More Related