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Reference — Mental Health

Defense Mechanisms Reference

Defense mechanisms are unconscious mental strategiesthe ego uses to manage anxiety and protect itself from distress. NCLEX loves the “name that mechanism” scenario — here is the high-yield set with examples.

Educational use only. This reference is an educational study aid for recognizing common ego defense mechanisms; it is not a diagnostic tool. 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.

Common Defense Mechanisms

MechanismDefinitionExample
DenialRefusing to accept a painful realityA patient newly diagnosed with cancer insists the labs are wrong
RepressionUnconsciously blocking distressing thoughts from awarenessAn abuse survivor cannot recall the event
SuppressionConsciously pushing a thought aside for later (adaptive)'I'll deal with the bill after my surgery'
ProjectionAttributing one's own unacceptable feelings to someone elseAn unfaithful spouse accuses the partner of cheating
DisplacementRedirecting feelings from the real source to a safer targetAngry at the boss, the patient snaps at the nurse
RationalizationJustifying behavior with logical-sounding but false reasons'I failed because the test was unfair'
RegressionReverting to an earlier developmental stage under stressA hospitalized child returns to bed-wetting or thumb-sucking
Reaction formationActing the opposite of an unacceptable impulseSomeone who dislikes a coworker is overly friendly to them
SublimationChanneling unacceptable urges into acceptable activity (adaptive)Aggression channeled into competitive sports
UndoingTrying to cancel out an act with a counter-actGiving a gift after a hurtful argument; OCD rituals
SplittingViewing people as all-good or all-bad (borderline PD)Idealizing one nurse and devaluing another
ConversionAnxiety transformed into a physical symptomSudden paralysis with no organic cause after trauma
IdentificationAdopting the qualities of an admired personA new nurse mimics a respected preceptor's style

Adaptive vs Maladaptive

Defense mechanisms aren’t inherently bad — in moderation they help us cope. Sublimation and suppression are considered the most mature/adaptive. They become maladaptive when they are rigid, overused, or distort reality so much that they interfere with function (e.g., persistent denial that delays treatment, or splitting that disrupts care). The nurse’s job is to recognize the mechanism, gauge whether it’s helping or harming, and gently support healthier coping when it isn’t.

Test-Taking Tips

Watch the easy mix-ups. Projection puts the feeling onto someone else; displacement moves it to a safer target. Repression is unconscious forgetting; suppression is a conscious “not now.” Reaction formation = acting the opposite of the true feeling. Undoing tries to reverse an act and underlies many OCD rituals. Conversion turns anxiety into a physical symptom (the link to conversion disorder).

NCLEX Pearls

  • Defense mechanisms are UNCONSCIOUS (except suppression, which is conscious) strategies to reduce anxiety.
  • Projection = blaming others for your own feelings; displacement = redirecting feelings to a safer target.
  • Sublimation (urges → acceptable activity) and suppression are the most mature/adaptive.
  • Regression (reverting to earlier behavior under stress) is classic in hospitalized children.
  • Undoing underlies OCD rituals; conversion turns anxiety into a physical symptom (conversion disorder).
  • Splitting (all-good/all-bad) is the borderline personality disorder hallmark.

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 →