Clinical meaning
A crisis is a state of psychological disequilibrium that occurs when an individual's usual coping mechanisms are insufficient to manage a stressful event, resulting in overwhelming distress and functional impairment. Crisis theory (Caplan, 1964) describes the crisis timeline: the precipitating event disrupts homeostasis, usual coping fails, anxiety escalates through four phases. Phase 1: initial rise in anxiety with activation of habitual coping strategies. Phase 2: continued stress, coping fails, anxiety increases. Phase 3: emergency problem-solving strategies are tried (trial-and-error, novel approaches, redefinition of the problem). Phase 4: if resolution is not achieved, major disorganization occurs with cognitive, emotional, and behavioral deterioration, potentially including psychotic symptoms, violence, or suicide. Crisis resolution typically occurs within 4-6 weeks as the individual either develops new coping skills (positive resolution), returns to pre-crisis functioning (status quo), or develops maladaptive patterns (negative resolution). De-escalation is the systematic process of reducing emotional intensity and aggression through verbal and non-verbal communication techniques. The practical nurse is often the first responder in psychiatric crises and must be competent in verbal de-escalation, safety assessment, and therapeutic crisis intervention.