ABSTRACT
While psychic pain is linked to melancholy, to the loss of an object, psychological suffering indicates difficult affective phenomena, which are not necessarily connected to a personality structure or to a particular pathology, but which can be explained by the very nature of our humanity.
Subject(s)
Pain/nursing , Pain/psychology , Stress, Psychological/nursing , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Anxiety Disorders/nursing , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Comprehension , Depressive Disorder/nursing , Depressive Disorder/psychology , Humans , Hypochondriasis/nursing , Hypochondriasis/psychology , Hysteria/nursing , Hysteria/psychology , Life Change Events , Nurse's Role/psychology , Nursing Assessment , Object Attachment , Psychotherapy , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/nursing , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychologySubject(s)
Anxiety Disorders/nursing , Education, Nursing , Educational Measurement , Hysteria/nursing , Phobic Disorders/nursing , Anxiety Disorders/diagnosis , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Germany , Humans , Hysteria/diagnosis , Hysteria/psychology , Internal-External Control , Phobic Disorders/diagnosis , Phobic Disorders/psychology , Somatoform Disorders/diagnosis , Somatoform Disorders/nursing , Somatoform Disorders/psychologySubject(s)
Nurse-Patient Relations , Psychiatric Nursing/education , Adult , Female , Humans , Hysteria/nursing , Teaching/methodsABSTRACT
Patients who suffer from physical symptoms with no apparent organic pathology often receive inappropriate care in the general hospital. Many terms have been used to describe such patients, often derogatory. More careful assessment, systematic description and treatments are required from all staff. In this study a sample (N = 79) of patients with various 'hysterical' complaints, other than pain, were interviewed, and completed a set of psychological instruments to detect any personality or mood disturbance. These data were also collected from two comparison groups from a psychiatric clinic (34) and a neurological setting (36). The main purpose of this study, to identify differences between these groups, was achieved. Patients in the main sample were found to have a high frequency of affective disturbance, being moderately anxious and depressed. Most understood that their problems may have been psychological but had an unrealistic view of their coping strategies and life problems. Nurses in both general and psychiatric settings could have an immensely important role in both identifying such patients and their needs and in providing appropriate guidance and treatments.