
(Solution) NR603 Week 6: Mental Health Final Treatment Plan/Analysis – Part 2
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Description
Week 6: Mental Health Final Treatment Plan/Analysis – Part 2
Total Points Possible: 40
Requirements:
Part 2- Turning in your final treatment plan and Analysis
The final treatment plan will include the primary diagnosis, diagnostic testing recommended by National Guidelines. Medications, interventions, education, labs, follow up, referrals. After completing the treatment plan include the following sections in a large area called ANALYSIS:
- Pathophysiology and Pharmacology: For the primary diagnoses in the case, write a brief summary of the underlying pathophysiology and tie pharmacological treatment chosen in the reversal or control of that pathology.
- Additional analysis of the case: This includes national guidelines that were or should have been used to make diagnosis or treatment and review how they applied or how care was unique but based in guidelines.
- Follow-up/Referrals: This means how the patient was doing when seen a second time if this applies. This would be their response to your plan of care. OR when Follow up will occur and what actions will be taken on the follow up visit. Referrals if indicated.
- Quality: Include anything that should have been considered in hindsight or changes you would make in seeing similar patients in the future with the same complaint, history, exam, or diagnosis. Add anything you learned from discussion in the class that shed new light on this patient.
- Coding and Billing. Any or all CPT and ICD-10 codes that should have been used (List them and name them only
Solution
Week 6: Mental Health Final Treatment Plan/Analysis – Part 2
Pathophysiology and Pharmacology
In the general community, panic disorder (PD) affects 3.7 percent of the population each year, with a cumulative incidence rate of up to 5 percent in the general populace and as high as 15 percent in the medical context. Panic Disorder (PD) is twice as common among women as it is among males, with an average age of onset of 28 years old. PD affects around 15% of children and adolescents. Understanding the underlying etiology of panic disorder (PD) might lead to better diagnosis and treatment options in the future. It’s still unclear exactly how panic disorder manifests itself, although psychobiological etiology is now the most widely accepted explanation. Fear networks, including those of the amygdala and its connections to other parts of the brain (the hypothalamus, hippocampus, etc.), are implicated in developing panic episodes. Inappropriate amygdala activation results in neuroendocrine, autonomic, and behavioral reactions to fear or stress (APA, 2021)..………….. Kindly click the purchase icon above to but the full tutorial at $10