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Apex Nursing

Reference — Mental Health

Mental Status Exam Reference

The Mental Status Exam (MSE) is the standard framework for assessing and documenting a patient's current psychiatric state. It is performed through direct observation and targeted questioning during every psychiatric encounter. This reference covers all nine components with assessment focus, documentation language, and normal vs. abnormal findings.

Educational use only. The MSE is a clinical assessment tool. Findings must be interpreted in the context of the full clinical picture, patient history, and cultural background. This reference is for nursing education and NCLEX preparation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Overview

The MSE is analogous to the physical exam in medical practice — it is a systematic, standardized method of assessing the patient's current mental state. Unlike a psychiatric history (which covers the past), the MSE captures what is observed and reported right now.

The MSE guides differential diagnosis, tracks response to treatment, and identifies safety concerns. Nurses document MSE findings in objective, behavioral language — avoiding inference or diagnosis. The nine standard components are assessed in order:

AppearanceBehaviorMoodAffectThought ProcessThought ContentPerceptionsCognitionInsight & Judgment

MSE Components

1. Appearance

Assessment focus: What does the patient look like? Overall impression, grooming, dress, hygiene, age appearance, weight, distinguishing features.

Normal findings: Well-groomed, dressed appropriately for weather and occasion, appears stated age

Abnormal findings: Disheveled, poor hygiene, malodorous, clothing inappropriate for season, appears older or younger than stated age, evidence of self-neglect

Documentation example: "Patient appears disheveled, wearing hospital gown over street clothing, malodorous, hair matted."

2. Behavior / Psychomotor Activity

Assessment focus: Eye contact, posture, gait, psychomotor activity (retardation vs. agitation), gestures, attitude toward examiner, mannerisms.

Normal findings: Cooperative, calm, appropriate eye contact, unremarkable posture and gait

Abnormal findings: Psychomotor retardation (slowed), agitation (pacing, hand-wringing), catatonia, tremor, tics, poor eye contact, hostility, guarded

Documentation example: "Patient seated, cooperative but guarded. Maintains minimal eye contact. Notable psychomotor retardation — slow to respond and move."

3. Mood

Assessment focus: The patient's subjective, sustained emotional state. Ask directly: "How are you feeling emotionally?" Document in the patient's own words in quotation marks.

Normal findings: "Fine," "Good," "Okay" — or a specific, appropriate emotion

Abnormal findings: "Depressed," "Hopeless," "On top of the world," "Numb," "Terrified," "Empty"

Documentation example: "Patient reports mood as 'terrible, like there's no point.'"

4. Affect

Assessment focus: The observable, external expression of emotion — what the nurse can see and hear. Describe range, intensity, stability, and congruence with mood and content.

DescriptorMeaning
Full / broadNormal range of emotional expression
RestrictedLess range than expected
BluntedMarkedly reduced emotional expression
FlatVirtually no emotional expression — characteristic of schizophrenia
LabileRapidly shifting, unpredictable emotional expression
CongruentAffect matches mood and thought content — appropriate
IncongruentAffect does not match content — e.g., laughing while discussing a death

5. Thought Process

Assessment focus: How does the patient think? The form and organization of thought — inferred from speech. Not what is said, but how it is connected.

  • Goal-directed / linear: Normal — thoughts flow logically from one to another, reaching a conclusion
  • Circumstantial: Overly detailed, eventually returns to the point — associated with mania, anxiety
  • Tangential: Goes off on a tangent and never returns to the point
  • Flight of ideas: Rapid, pressured jumping between loosely connected topics — characteristic of mania
  • Loose associations: Illogical, disconnected thought links — characteristic of schizophrenia
  • Word salad: Completely incoherent speech, no discernible connections — severe disorganization
  • Thought blocking: Sudden stoppage mid-sentence — associated with schizophrenia

6. Thought Content

Assessment focus: What is the patient thinking about? Always assess for suicidal ideation, homicidal ideation, delusions, and obsessions.

  • Suicidal ideation: Passive (wish to be dead) or active (plan, intent, means) — document verbatim
  • Homicidal ideation: Thoughts of harming others; identify specific target if present
  • Delusions: Fixed false beliefs — persecutory, grandiose, referential, somatic, nihilistic
  • Obsessions: Intrusive, unwanted, distressing thoughts
  • Phobias: Intense, irrational fear of a specific stimulus
  • Preoccupations: Topics the patient returns to repeatedly

7. Perceptions

Assessment focus: Is the patient experiencing sensory experiences without an external stimulus?

  • Hallucinations: Auditory (most common in schizophrenia), visual (common in delirium/substance intoxication), tactile, olfactory, gustatory — note modality and content
  • Illusions: Misperception of a real stimulus (seeing a coat rack as a person) — less concerning than hallucinations
  • Depersonalization: Feeling detached from one's body or thoughts
  • Derealization: Feeling that the environment is unreal or dreamlike

8. Cognition

Assessment focus: Level of consciousness, orientation, attention, memory, and abstract thinking. Validated tools: MMSE, MoCA, CAM (delirium screening).

DomainAssessment Method
Level of consciousnessAlert, lethargic, obtunded, stuporous, comatose
OrientationOriented × 4: person, place, time, situation
AttentionSerial 7s, spell "WORLD" backward, digit span
MemoryImmediate (3-word recall), recent (yesterday's events), remote (historical facts)
Abstract thinkingInterpret proverbs ("A rolling stone gathers no moss"), identify similarities

9. Insight and Judgment

Insight

The patient's awareness and understanding of their mental illness. Ranges from no insight to full insight:

  • Poor insight: patient denies having a mental illness and denies need for treatment (common in psychosis and mania)
  • Partial insight: acknowledges some problems but minimizes or externalizes
  • Full insight: recognizes having an illness, understands how it affects behavior, acknowledges need for treatment

Judgment

The ability to make reasonable decisions and understand consequences. Assessed via real situations or hypothetical scenarios:

  • Impaired judgment: making dangerous decisions, risky behavior during mania, impulsive actions
  • Ask: "What would you do if you found a stamped, addressed envelope on the sidewalk?"
  • Insight and judgment inform treatment decision-making capacity assessments

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Psychiatric Association (DSM-5-TR) · American Psychiatric Nurses Association (APNA) · SAMHSA. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →