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FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE
A Lady with a Lamp
What a comfort it was to see her pass. She would speak to one, and nod and smile to as many more; but she could not do it to all you know. We lay there by the hundreds; but we could kiss her shadow as it fell and lay our heads on the pillow again content British nurse, hospital reformer, and humanitarian. . Anonymous Born in Florence, Italy, on May 12, 1820, Nightingale was raised mostly in Derbyshire, England, and received a thorough classical education from her father. In 1849 she went abroad to study the European hospital system, and in 1850 she began training in nursing at the Institute of Saint Vincent de Paul in Alexandria, Egypt. She subsequently studied at the Institute for Protestant Deaconesses at Kaiserswerth, Germany. In 1853 she became superintendent of the Hospital for Invalid Gentlewomen in London
It may seem a strange principle to enunciate as the very first requirement in a Hospital that it should do the sick no harm. Florence Nightingale (1820 - 1910) Florence Nightingale undertook nurses training at the age of 31. The outbreak of Crimean war and a request by the British to organize nursing care for a military hospital in Turkey gave Nightingale an opportunity for achievement. As she successfully overcame enormous difficulties, Nightingale challenged prejudices against women and elevated the status of all nurses. After the war, she returned to England, where she established a training school for nurses and wrote books about healthcare and nursing education.
No man, not even a doctor, ever gives any other definition of what a nurse should be than this"devoted and obedient." This definition would do just as well for a porter. It might even do for a horse. It would not do for a policeman. Florence Nightingale (1820 - 1910) FLORENCE NIGHTINGALES CONTRIBUTIONS
Identifying the personal needs of the patient and the role of the nurse in meeting those needs Establishing standards for hospital management Establishing a respected occupation for women Establishing nursing education Recognizing the two components of nursing: health and illness Believing that nursing is separate and distinct from medicine Recognizing that nutrition is important to health Instituting occupational and recreational therapy for sick people Stressing the need for continuing education for nurses Maintaining accurate records , recognized as the beginnings of nursing research
CLEANLINESS VENTILATION
Dorothea Orem
Born in Baltimore, Maryland. One of Americas foremost nursing theorists. Father was a
Education
Studied at Providence Hospital school of Nursing in Washington D.C. in 1930s Got her B.S.N.E. in 1939 and her M.S.N.E in 1946 both from the Catholic University of America Got her M.S.N.E. at Catholic University of America in 1946 1958-1960 upgraded practical nursing training at Department of Health, Education and Welfare Was editor to several texts including Concepts Formalization in Nursing: Process and Production, revised in 1980, 1985, 1991, 1995, 2001
III.Theory of Nursing Systems The ability of the nurse to aid the person in meeting
current and potential self care demands. Focused on person Three support modalities identified in theory including: total compensatory, partial compensatory, and educative/supportive compensatory. The clients ability for self care involvement will determine under which support modality they would be considered.
Encompasses total nurse care-client unable to do for Charlene receives constant themselves. care from her nurse & family,
who do everything from feeding her to taking her to doctors
Involves both the nurse and client sharing in the self care requirements.
b. Partially Compensatory
Support elicit the help of the nurse solely as a consultant, teacher or resource person. Client
c. Educative/Support Compensatory
Nurses Role
The nurses role in helping the client to achieve or maintain a level of optimal health and wellness is to act as an advocate, redirector, support person and teacher, and to provide an environment conducive to therapeutic
Lydia E. Hall
Lydia E. Hall received her basic nursing education at York Hospital of Nursing in York, Pennsylvania. Both her B.S. and M.A. are from Teachers College, Columbia University, New York.
Lydia Hall was the first director of the Loeb Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation. Her experience in nursing spans the clinical, educational, and supervisory components. Her publications include several articles on the definition of nursing and quality of care. Lydia Hall has put forth what she considers a basic philosophy of nursing, upon which the nurse may base patient care. This philosophy is used as a working reality at the Loeb Center for Nursing.
The patient also have assess to a large communal dining room. The primary care givers are professional nurses with non patient care activities being supplied by messenger-attendants and secretaries. To create a nondirective selling, there are very few rules, no routine, no schedules, and no dictated mealtimes or specified visiting hours. The nurse at Loeb strive to help the patient determine and clarify goals and, with patient work out ways to achieve the goal at the individual pace, consistent with the medical treatment plan and congruent with the patients sense of self.
The Body Natural and biological sciences Intimate bodily care aspect of nursing The Care
The Core
The Disease
Pathological and therapeutic sciences Seeing the patient and family through the medical care aspect of nursing
The Cure
Seeing the patient and family through medical care The Cure
The Core
The Care
The Cure
2. Nursing Diagnosis
3. Planning
Involves setting priorities and mutually establishing patientcentered goals. Patient is the best person to set goals and arrange priorities.
4. Implementation
Involves the actual institution of the plan of care. Actual giving of nursing care
5. Evaluation
Process of assessing the patients progress toward the health goals. Process is directed toward deciding whether or not the patient is successful in reaching the established
Margaret Jean Harman Watson was born in Southern West Virginia and grew up during 1940s and 1950s in the small town of Welch , Western Virginia in the Appalachian Mountains. As the youngest of eight children, she was surrounded by an extended familycommunity environment.
Watson attended high school in West Virginia and then attended the Lewis Gale School of Nursing in Roanoke, Virginia. After graduation in 1961, she married her husband, Douglas, and move to west to his native state in Colorado. But Douglas died in
1998.
After moving to Colorado, Watson continued her nursing education and graduate studies at the University of Colorado. She earned a B.S. in nursing in 1964 at the Boulder campus; an M.S. in psychiatric mental health in 1966 at the health science campus; an Ph.D. In educational psychology ad counseling in 1973 at the Graduate School, Boulder Campus. After Watson completed her Ph.D. degree she joined the School of Nursing faculty of the University of Colorado Health Science Center in Denver, where she had served in both faculty and administrative position.
The Center for Human Caring at the University of Colorado was the first interdisciplinary center with an overall commitment to develop in use knowledge of human caring and healing as the moral and scientific basis of clinical practice in nursing scholarship as the foundation for efforts to transform the current health care system. During its existence, the center developed and sponsored numerous clinical , educational and community scholarship activities and project for human caring. During her career, Watson has been active in community programs, having served as a founder and member of the Board of Boulder County Hospice and she has initiated numerous collaborations with area health care facilities. As the recipient of several research and advance education federal grants and awards.
national videos on nursing theory. These include Circles of Knowledge and Conversation on Caring with Jean Watson and Janet Quinn.
Watson's publications reflect the evolution of her theory of caring. Her writings have been geared toward educating nursing students and providing them with ontological and epistemological basis for their praxis and research direction.
Much of her current wok begun with the 1979 publication, Nursing: The Philosophy of Science and Caring which she says begun as class notes for a course she was developing. She says the book emerged from her quest to bring new meaning and dignity to the world of nursing and patient care- care that seemed too limited in its scope at that time, largely defined by medicines paradigm and traditional biomedical science models.
Nursing: Human Science and Human Care- A Theory of Nursing, published in 1985 and re-released in 1998, was her second major work. The purpose of this book was to address some of the conceptual and philosophical problems that still existed in nursing. She hoped that others would join as she sought to elucidate the human care process in nursing, preserved the concept of person in our science, and better our contribution to society. This book has been translated to Chinese, German, Japanese, Korean and Swedish. In Watson's original philosophy and science of caring, she referred to caring as the essence of nursing practice. Caring is more ideal rather than a task oriented behavior and include such characteristics as the actual caring occasion and the transpersonal caring moment, phenomena that occur when an authentic caring relationship exist between the nurse and the patient.
Watson bases her theory for nursing practice on the following 10 carative factory. Each has a dynamic phenomenological component that is relative to the individuals involved in the relationship as encompassed by nursing. The first three interdependent factors serve as the philosophical foundation for the science of caring.
I. FORMATION OF A HUMANISTIC
6. SYSTEMATIC USE OF THE SCIENTIFIC PROBLEM - SOLVING METHOD FOR DECISION MAKING
Use of the nursing process brings a scientific problem solving to nursing care,
8. PROVISION FOR SUPPORTIVE, PROTECTIVE, AND CORRECTIVE MENTSL, PHYSICAL, SOCIOCULTURAL, AND SPIRITUAL ENVIRONMENT
Nurses must recognize the influence that internal amd external environment have on the health and illness of individuals.
Nursing Human Science and Human Care, Watson26-33 States that both Nursing
education and Health care delivery system must be based on human values and concern for the welfare of others.
of
Conservation Theory "Levines model focuses on individuals as holistic beings, and the major area of concern for nurses in maintenance of a persons wholeness."
Conservation Principles
Energy Integrity
Structural Integrity
Concepts:
a.Wholeness
It emphasizes a sound, organic, progressive, mutuality between diversified functions and parts within an entirety, the boundaries of which are open and fluent
Concepts:
b. Adaptation
It is the process of change whereby the individual retains his integrity within realities of his internal and external environment (Levine, 1973)
Concepts:
c. Conservation
The way complex systems are able to continue to function even when severely challenged (Levine, 1990)
Concepts:
Conservation: Symbolized by a light bulb in the center. Light bulbs give light and are productive. Light bulbs also symbolize ideas theories are ideas. Historicity: genetics. The hearts show dominant (dark pink) and recessive (light pink) traits.
Concepts:
Specificity: Different pathways are coming from the center of the light bulb representing the multiple stimulus response pathways. Redundancy: If one pathway can't get the job done, another pathway will compensate.
Betty Neuman
The Neuman Systems Model was originally developed in 1970 at the University of California, Los Angeles, by Betty Neuman, Ph.D., RN. The model was developed by Dr. Neuman as a way to teach an introductory nursing course to nursing students. The goal of the model was to provide a wholistic overview of the physiological, psychological, sociocultural, and developmental aspects of human beings. After a two-year evaluation of the model, it was published in Nursing Research (Neuman & Young, 1972). Neuman has since published three editions of the Neuman Systems Model. The Neuman Systems Model Trustees Group was established in 1988. This group was established for the perpetuation, presevation, and protection of the integrity of the model and any future changes in model must have the consent of the trustees
1924 Born near Lowell, Ohio. 1947 Received RN Diploma from Peoples Hospital School of Nursing, Akron, Ohio Moved to California and gained experience as a hospital, staff, and head nurse; school nurse and industrial nurse; and as a clinical instructor in medicalsurgical, critical care and communicable disease nursing. 1957 Attended University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) with double major in psychology and public health. Received BS in nursing from UCLA. 1966 Received Masters degree in Mental Health, Public Health Consultation fom UCLA.
Biographical Information
Recognized as pioneer in the field of nursing involvement in community mental health. Began developing her model while lecturing in community mental health at UCLA. 1972 Her model was first published as a 'Model for teaching total person approach to patient problems' in Nursing Research. 1985 Received doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Pacific Western University. 1998 Received second honorary doctorate - this one from Grand Valley State University, Allendale, Michigan.
Neumans Model was influenced by a variety of deChardin sources: Pierre Telhard was a catholic
priest and scientist who is credited with first proposing the idea of spiritual evolution. He believed that spiritually humans are evolving toward an ultimate perfection that he called the omega point. Gestalt Theory is a theory of german origin that centers around the concept of the gestalt or the whole. It emphasizes the primacy of the phenomenal (the perceived), asserting that the human world of experience is the
General Adaptation Syndrome is quite pervasive and even taught to high schoolers in their health class. It postulates that there is a nonspecific response to stress involving three stages: 1) alarm, 2) resistance, 3) exhaustion. General Systems Theory grew out of the field of Thermodynamics, a branch of physics, chemistry and engineering. Thermodynamics is the study of the flow of energy from one system to another. General systems theory posits that the world is made up of systems that are interconnected and are influenced by each
In Short
Neuman's model is just that-a model, not a full theory. It is a conceptual framework, a visual representation, for thinking about humans and nurses and their interactions. The goal is to achieve optimal system stability and balance. Prevention is the main
Person Variables
Physiological - refers of the physicochemical structure and function of the body. Psychological - refers to mental processes and emotions. Sociocultural - refers to relationships; and social/cultural expectations and activities. Spiritual - refers to the influence of spiritual beliefs. Developmental - refers to those processes related to development over the lifespan.
Central Core
The basic structure, or central core, is made up of the basic survival factors that are common to the species (Neuman, 1995, in George, 1996). These factors include: system variables, genetic features, and the strengths and weaknesses of the system parts. The person's system is an open system and therefore is dynamic and constantly changing and evolving. Stability, or homeostasis, occurs when the amount of energy that is available exceeds that being used by the system. A homeostatic
The flexible line of defense is the outer barrier or cushion to the normal line of defense, the line of resistance, and the core structure. The flexible line of defense is dynamic and can be changed/altered in a relatively short period of time.
The normal line of defense represents system stability over time. It is considered to be the usual level of stability in the system. The normal line of defense can change over time in response to
Lines of Resistance
The lines of resistance protect the basic structure and become activated when environmental stressors invade the normal line of defense.
Reconstitution
Reconstitution is the increase in energy that occurs in relation to the degree of reaction to the stressor. Reconstitution begins at any point following initiation of treatment for
Stressors
Stressors are capable of having either a positive or negative effect on the client system. A stressor is any environmental force which can potentially affect the stability of the system: they may be: Intrapersonal - occur within person. Interpersonal - occur between individuals. Extrapersonal - occur outside the
Prevention
Prevention focuses on keeping stressors and the stress response from having a detrimental effect on the body. Primary Primary prevention occurs before the system reacts to a stressor. On the one hand, it strengthens the person (primarily the flexible line of defense) to enable him to better deal with stressors, and on the other hand manipulates the environment to reduce or weaken stressors. Primary prevention includes health promotion and maintenance of wellness.
Secondary Secondary prevention occurs after the system reacts to a stressor and is provided in terms of existing systems. Secondary prevention focuses on preventing damage to the central core by strengthening the internal lines of resistance and/or removing the stressor. Tertiary Tertiary prevention occurs after the system has been treated through secondary prevention strategies. Tertiary prevention offers support to the client and attempts to add energy to the system or reduce energy needed in order to facilitate reconstitution.
The main use of the Neuman Model in practice and in research is that its concentric layers allow for a simple classification of how severe a problem is. If a stress response is perceived by the patient or assessed by the nurse, then there has been an invasion of the normal line of defense and a major contraction of the flexible line of defense. Thus, the level of insult can be quantified allowing for graduated interventions. The drawback of this is that there is no way to know whether our operationalization of the person variables is a good representation of the underlying theoretical structures.
The environment is seen to be the totality of the internal and external forces which surround a person and with which they interact at any given time. These forces include the intrapersonal, interpersonal and extrapersonal stressors which can affect the person's normal line of defense and so can affect the stability of the system. The internal environment exists within the client system. The external environment exists outside the client system. Neuman also identified a created environment which is an environment that is created and developed unconsicously by the client and is symbolic of system wholeness.
Environment
Health
Neuman sees health as being equated with wellness. She defines health/wellness as "the condition in which all parts and subparts (variables) are in harmony with the whole of the client (Neuman, 1995)". As the person is in a constant interaction with the environment, the state of wellness (and by implication any other state) is in dynamic equilibrium, rather than in any kind of steady state. Neuman proposes a wellness-illness continuum, with the person's position on that continuum being influenced by their interaction with the variables and the stressors they encounter. The client system moves toward illness and death when more energy is needed than is available. The client system moves toward wellness when more energy is available than is needed.
Nursing
Neuman sees nursing as a unique profession that is concerned with all of the variables which influence the response a person might have to a stressor. The person is seen as a whole, and it is the task of nursing to address the whole person. Neuman defines nursing as actions which assist individuals, families and groups to maintain a maximum level of wellness, and the primary aim is stability of the patient/client system, through nursing interventions to reduce stressors.
Imogene King
Imogene King is a nursing theorist who has made significant contributions to the development of nursing knowledge.
Kings Conceptual Framework and Theory of Goal Attainment body image growth and development time communication interaction
Introduction
Imogene King developed a conceptual model for nursing in the mid 1960s with the idea that human beings are open systems interacting with the environment. Kings worked is considered a conceptual model because it comprises both a conceptual framework and a theory. Kings Conceptual Framework and Theory of Goal Attainment. Finally, Kings work is compared to rural nursing theory in an effort to identify common themes.
The central focus of Kings framework is man as a dynamic human being whose perceptions of objects, persons, and events influence his behavior, social interaction, and health. Kings conceptual framework includes three interacting systems with each system having as own distinct group of concepts and characteristics.
Social system
Interpersonal System
Involve individuals interacting with one another. Communication between the nurse and the client can be classified as verbal or nonverbal.
Social System
Are group of people within a community or society that share common goals, interests, and values. Examples of social systems include the family, the school, and the church.
The relationship between the three systems led to Kings Theory of Goal Attainment. The conceptual framework of the interpersonal system had the greatest influence on the development of theory.
Ten Major Concepts from the Personal and Interpersonal Systems Human interactions Growth Perception Development Communication Transactions Role Stress Time Space
After careful analysis of Kings Conceptual Framework and Theory of Goal Attainment, it is evident that this model can be implemented in an emergency room setting.
A busy emergency department often creates an intimidating environment for patients and they may feel threatened, or feel that they have no control over decisions that affect their
The primary complaint of emergency room patients is the length of waiting time. One intervention that has proven successful in this situation has been the installation of televisions and telephones in patients rooms in the emergency department. These devices seem to help the patients pass the time and reduce some of the frustrations associated with long waiting times.
Nursing Theory
Rural residents are a unique group of individuals Rural residents are more likely to comply with health care regimens that do not interfere with their daily routines, or create inconveniences for them.
(Rural Setting)
After careful consideration of the concepts associated with Kings three interacting systems, the concept of perception, growth and development, time, communication and interaction are helpful to the nurse when
Rural dwellers have a different perception of health than that of urban dwellers. It is important for the nurse to be nonjudgmental in these situations because this is simply a way of life for rural residents, a way of life that they have come to accept as the norm.
Growth and development is another concept that is applicable to rural nursing. Kings Concept of time can also be attributed to rural communities. The last two concepts from Kings
Using Kings Theory of Goal Attainment in the rural community presents some challenges in the nurse. Mutual goal setting would only be successful if the clients trusted that the goals would benefit them. Because rural residents are timeoriented individuals, the goals
There are elements of Kings theory that are applicable to both the emergency and to nursing practice in rural settings. Concepts from Kings work are useful regardless of the context in which they are used. Human beings are dynamic individuals and they are continuously interacting with their respective environments. King conceptualizations in the early 1960s continue to guide the practice of nursing.
BIOGRAPHY:
Martha E. Rogers was born May 12, 1914, in Dallas, Texas, the eldest of four children. She began her collegiate education at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, where she studied science from 1931 to 1933. She received her nursing diploma from Knoxville General Hospital School of Nursing in 1936. In 1937 she received a B.S. from George Peabody College in Nashville, Tennessee. Her other degrees include an M.A. in public health nursing supervision from Teacher's College, Columbia University, New York in 1945 and an M.P.H. in 1952 and a Sc.D. in 1954, both from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. For 21 years, from 1954 to 1975, she was Professor and Head of the Division of Nursing at New York University. In 1979 she became Professor Emeritus and was an active member of the nursing profession until her death on March 13, 1994.
Rogers' early nursing practice was in rural public health nursing in Michigan and in visiting nurse supervision, stimulating, idealistic, visionary, prophetic, philosophic, academic, outspoken, humorous, blunt, and ethical. She has been widely recognized and honored for her contributions and leadership in nursing. Her nursing past colleagues consider her one of the most original thinkers in363. education, and practice in Connecticut. She then established the Visiting Nurse Service of Phoenix, Arizona. Her publications include three books and over 200 articles; she continued to write and publish extensively. She lectured in 46 states, the District of Columbia, Brazil, Puerto Rico, Mexico, Holland, China, Newfoundland, Columbia, and other countries.
Rogers received honorary doctorates in Science, Letters, and Humane Letters from such renowned institutions as Duquesne University, University of San Diego, Iona College, Fairfield University, Mercy College, and Washburn University of Topeka. In addition, she received numerous awards and citations for her contributions and leadership in nursing. She received citations for "Inspiring Leadership in the Field of Intergroup Relations" by Chi Eta Phi Sorority, "In Recognition of Your Outstanding Contribution to Nursing" by New York University. "For Distinguished Service to Nursing" by Teachers College, and many others. She was honored by the many awards, funds, and scholarships that have been established in her name. A verbal portrait of Rogers might include such descriptive terms as
In order to understand the Rogerian Dr. Rogers presented her evolutionary model in 1970 with the publication of An Introduction to the Theoretical Basis of Nursing. This view presented a drastic but attractive way of viewing human interaction and the nursing process. Her concepts are derived from the view of the universe as a collection of open systems of which we interact independently and continuously without causality. framework a set of definitions must be defined as a building block for the larger abstract system.
Energy
Energy is irreducible, indivisible and has a definable pattern. Energy is the continuous interaction between a person with the environment. Each individual has their own degree, identity and intensity of interaction with the environment. The combined energy between individual and environment is inseparable and integrated completely.
Openness
Both human and environmental systems are open. This also implies that the systems exchange energy continuously and remain open-always. Change affects both systems mutually. People today are different then they had been the day before and can never return to the person they were. Humans do not adapt to their environment but are integral with the environment
Pandimensionality
Human beings have unique properties that enable them to be irreducible and indivisible. Though we live in a three-dimensional world we are aware of other dimensions that affect our lives. A three-dimensional world fails to take into account the concept of time. Rogers coined the term pandimensionality to describe a reality without any spatial or time restraints. This better describes a reality without linear, spatial or temporal restraints
Human energy can be differentiated from environmental energy by its pattern. Patterns cannot be seen but manifestations of the pattern can be observable. Human patterns can be described as a single weave that is dynamic, unpredictable, creative and continuous. An analogy would be a kaleidoscope. As the kaleidoscope is rotated (simulating time) each piece of colored glass falls in an unpredictable manner, with the collection of pieces creating a unique form with equally unique color distribution. There is some order in the turning of the kaleidoscope but the changes of pattern are never predictable or the same. Human patterns are also unpredictable within a degree of order. Each human perceives and interacts with their environment with a different degree of energy.
Pattern
Principles of Homeodynamics
The principles of homeodynamics postulate a way of perceiving unitary man. Change in the life process in man are predicted to be inseparable from environmental changes and to reflect the mutual and simultaneous interaction between the two at any point space-time. Changes are irreversible, nonrepeatable. They are rhythmical in nature and evidence growing complexity of pattern and organization. Change proceeds by the continuous repatterning of both man and environment by resonating waves. Evidence of conditions under which these principles hold arises out of examination of the real world. Investigations of a range of phenomena are necessary to provide the substantive data which can further the translation of these principles into practical application.
Principle of Resonancy:
The continuous change from lower to higher frequency wave patterns in human and environmental fields.
Principle of Helicy:
The continuous innovative, unpredictable, increasing diversity of human and environmental field patterns.
Principle of Integrality:
The continuous mutual human field and environmental field process.
FAYE G. ABDELLAH
Although Abdellahs writings are not specific as to a theoretical statement can be derived by using her three major concepts of health, nursing problems, and problem solving. Using the definition that a theory states the relationship between concepts, Abdellahs theory would state
ABDELLAHS THEORY
BASIC CONCEPT
HEALTH
The 21 Nursing Problems
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. To maintain good hygiene and physical comport To promote optimal activity exercise, rest, and sleep. To promote safely through the prevention of accidents, injury, or other trauma and through the prevention of the spread of infection. To maintain good body mechanics and prevent and correct deformities. To facilitate the maintenance of a supply of oxygen to all body cells. To facilitate the maintenance of nutrition of all body cells. To facilitate the maintenance of elimination. To facilitate the maintenance of fluid and electrolyte
14.
15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
21.
To facilitate the maintenance of effective verbal and nonverbal communication. To promote the development of productive interpersonal relationships. To facilitate progress towards achievement of personal spiritual goals. To create and/or maintain therapeutic environment. To facilitate awareness of self as an individual with varying physical, emotional, and developmental needs. To accept the optimum possible goals in the light of limitations, physical, and emotional. To use community resources as an aid in resolving problems arising from illness. To understand the role of social problems as influencing factors in the cause of illness.
Virginia Henderson
An early nursing theorist who contributed a lot to the nursing profession.
Attempted to define nursing in its unique focus. Contributions: The unique function of a nurse is to assist the individual, sick or well, in the performance of those activities contributing to health or its recovery (or to a peaceful death) that he would
Wrote one of the first nursing textbooks, Textbook of the Principles and Practice of Nursing.
The 14 components of basic human needs: Breathe normally. Eat and drink adequately. Eliminate body wastes. Move and maintain desirable postures./
1. 2. 3. 4.
Ernestine Wiedenbach -nursing is caring for someone in fashion -nursing is a helping service that is rendered with compassion skills and understanding to those in need of care, counsel and confidence in area of health. -the practice of nursing comprises a wide variety of services towards attainment of 3 components.
Characteristics of professional person that are essential for the professional nurse
1. Clarity of purpose. 2. Mastery of skills and knowledge.
3 Factors: 1. Central factors- which the practitioner recognizes essential to the particular discipline. 2. Prescription- for the fulfillment of the central purpose.
Wiedenbach second concept of Respect for individual she believes 1. Each human being is with unique potential to develop himself, the resources that enable him to maintain and sustain himself. 2. The human being
3. The human being needs stimulation in order to make the best use of his capabilities well. 4. Whatever the individual does represents his best judgment at the moment of doing it.
The Prescription: -directive activity -may indicate the broad general action appropriate to implementation of the basic concept, as well as suggest the kind behavior needed to carry out those action in accordance with the central
3 kinds of voluntary action 1. Mutually understood and agreed upon action 2. Recipient directed action 3. Practitioner directed action
The realities -the matrix w/c the action occurs. 5 Realities 1. the agent 4. the means 2. the recipient 5. the framework
Realities offer uniqueness in every situation Wiedenbach conceptualization of the nursing process Nursing action is the visible portion of nursing practice in w/c the nurse interacts by the word,
Nursing process is the essentially an internal personalized mechanism. Wiedenbachs 7 levels of awareness 1. Sensation experience sensory impression 2. Perception the
Comparison of Wiedenbachs theory and theProcess nursing process Nursing Wiedenbach Model
Assessment consider the patient holistically and requires extensive data collection The nurse is stimulated, then assess at the sensation and perception level w/c is involuntary and
Goal Weidenbach does not directly incorporate the concept of goal as part of a nursing process Implementation phase
Design level
Nursing diagnosis - made after much conscious thought and deliberation about the assessment data
Assumption compared to the nursing diagnosis - should be validated by gathering more data - voluntary Insight level includes joint
Evaluation
After the plan decided on, the nurse confirmed it with the patient. Once the plan has been decided it on and confirmed the nurse perform
Wiedenbach and the concept of man, health, society and nursing Wiedenbach emphasize that the human being process unique potential, strives towards self-direction, need stimulation and
Nurse central purpose determines that her role will be that of a helper. - is the application of knowledge end shall toward meeting a need for health express by a patient. - is a helping process with action directed toward providing something the patient requires on desire. - a process that will restore on extend the patient ability to cope with demand implicit in his healthy situation.
Theories
Hildegard Peplau used the term, psychodynamic nursing, to describe the dynamic relationship between a nurse and a patient, and it is also called as the nurse-patient relationship orientation, in which the person and the nurse mutually identify the person's problem identification, in which the person identifies with the nurse, thereby accepting help exploitation, in which the person makes use of the nurse's help resolution, in which the person accepts new goals and frees herself or himself from the relationship.
Callista Roy
Callista Roy
At age 14 she began working at a large general hospital, first as a pantry girl, then as a maid, and finally as a nurse's aid. After a soul-searching process of discernment, she decided to enter the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Carondelet, of which she has been a member for more than 40 years. Her college education began in a liberal arts program, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts with a major in nursing at Mount St. Mary's College, in Los Angeles.
Dr. Roy is best known for developing and continually updating the Roy Adaptation Model as a framework for theory, practice, and research in nursing. Two recent publications that Dr. Roy considers of great significance are The Roy Adaptation Model (second edition) written with Heather Andrews (Appleton & Lange) and The Roy Adaptation Model-Based Research: Twentyfive Years of Contributions to Nursing Science being published as a research monograph by Sigma Theta Tau.
Sister Callista Roy has continuously expanded her model form it's inception to the present. Her work is studied and utilized frequently in nursing education. Roy focuses on the individual (person) as a biopsychosocial adaptive system and describes nursing as a humanistic discipline that "places emphasis on the person's own coping abilities" (1984, p. 32). She believes hat the person's own coping abilities will enhance wellness (health). Roy's Adaptation Model of nursing relies heavily on the stress theory, the concept of adaptation, and the ability of the nurse to facilitate adaptation to stress. The term adaptation appears frequently throughout the model and is used to describe that which promotes the integrity of the person in terms of survival, growth, reproduction and mastery.
According to Roy, environment is all conditions, circumstances, and influences surrounding and affecting the development and behavior of persons and groups. Environment has both internal and external components, and is constantly changing. Health results with adaptation to reach optimal levels of individual potential in meeting physical, psychosocial, and self actualization needs. The individual is in constant interaction with the changing environment and to respond positively that person must adapt.
The person's adaptation level is determined by combined effect of three classes of stimuli (input): 1) Focal stimuli, 2) contextual stimuli, and 3) residual stimuli.
3. Residual stimuli--relevant factors that cannot be validated (subjective), e.g. beliefs, values, etc.....
The individual uses both innate and acquired biological, psychological, or social adaptive mechanisms. Roy's Model postulates that there is an interchange between the adaptive system (individual) and various stimuli (input) from the environment and itself.
First subsystem: Two Control Mechanisms (coping processes) Regulator--(physiological responses) concerned with the neuroendocrine responses. Receives input from external environment and from changes in the person's internal state. Cognator--(psychological responses) concerned with the process of perception (the link between the
Second subsystem: Effect or (Adaptive) Modes Additionally, four modes for effecting adaptation of the system include:
1. Physiological function--determined by physiological integrity derived from the basic physiological needs. 2. Self-Concept--determined by need of interaction with others and psychic
The major focus of Roys theory is on behavioral science concepts with the individual described as participants in biopsycho-social adaptive systems. Patients are described as being under varying degrees of stress and their goal is to adopt to that stress.
As a reflective practice theory, Orlandos theory contains concepts that are interrelated but are described separately. 1. professional nursing function organizing principle. 2. the patients presenting behavior-problematic situation.
It is concerned with providing direct assistance to individuals in whatever setting they are found, for the purpose of avoiding, relieving, diminishing, or curing of the individuals sense of helplessness.
These separate items reside within an individual and at any given moment occur in the following automatic, sometimes instantaneous sequence; (1) the person perceives with any one of his five sense organs an object or objects; (2) the perceptions
The action process in a person to person contact functioning in secret. The perception, thought and
the action process in a person to person contact functioning by open disclosure. The feelings of each other are directly available to
Action based on the nurses conclusion, without the patients participation, are often not helpful. Therefore, the nurse decides for reasons other than the meaning of the patients behavior. Thus if actions are carried out automatically, even though
When a situation becomes clear, it loses its problematic character and a new equilibrium is established. When the patients immediate needs for help have been determined and met, there is improvement. This change is observable in both
Improvementresolution
Guiding The nurses principle focus is on the finding out patient. The and meeting nurses mind patients is free from immediate distracting need for help. thoughts.
The nurse uses terms the patient can understand and explores immediate reactions with the patient to discover
With patient, the nurse determines action, needed and develop plans for each action. Nurse
implement
The nurse implements the plan and ask patient whether the action is helpful, if not, the nurse
improvement
The nurse ask patient if action did helped and observes verbal and non verbal behavior. If he or she improve then the needs
NURSING THEORY
Dorothy Johnson
Johnsons first paper on this topic outlined her philosophy of nursing, arguing that the key element was hands-on nursing services. She defined these services as caring for, rather then curing the patient. The definition of caring Johnson used defined caring as basic nursing procedures: comfort measures, environmental management, emotional support, and teaching. She believe that the physicians could be as kind as nurses but they focused their work on curing, rather than sustaining the patient.
CENTRAL THEME Nursing problems arise when there are disturbances in the system or subsystem or the behavioral function is below an optimal level.
APPLICATION TO CLINICAL PRACTICE Nursing interventions are designed to support/maintain, educate, counsel, and modify behaviors.
Dorothy Johnson used her observations of behavior over many years to formulate a general theory of man as a behavioral system. Te theory was originally resented orally in 1968 but was not published until 1980. Johnson defines a system as a whole that functions as a whole by virtue of the interdependence of its part. Individuals strive to maintain stability and balance in these parts through adjustments and adaptations to the forces that impinge on them. A behavioral system is patterned, repetitive, and purposeful. Johnsons key concepts describe the individual as a behavioral system composed of seven subsystems: 1. The attachment-affiliative subsystem provides survival and security. Its consequences are social inclusion, intimacy, and the formation and maintenance of a strong social bond. 2. The dependency subsystem promotes helping behavior that calls for a nurturing response. Its consequences are approval, attention or recognition, and physical assistance.
3. The ingestive subsystem satisfies appetite. It is governed by social and physiologic consideration as well as biologic. 4. The eliminative subsystem excretes body wastes. 5. The sexual subsystem functions dually for procreation and gratification.
6. The achievement subsystem attempts to manipulate the environment. It controls or masters an aspect of the self or environment to some standard of excellence. 7. The aggressive subsystem protects and preserves the self and society within the limits imposed by society. Each of the above subsystems has the same functional requirements: protection, nurturance, and stimulation. The subsystems responses are developed through motivation, experience, and learning and are influenced by biopsychosocial factors. Other concepts associated with Johnsons model are equilibrium , a stabilized but more or less transitory resting state in which the individual is in harmony with the self and environment; tension , a state of being stretched or strained; the stressor , internal or external stimuli that produce tension and result in a degree of instability.
Dorothy Johnsons professional nursing career began in 1942 when she graduated from Vanderbilt University School of Nursing. She was the top student in her class and received the prestigious Vanderbilt Founders medal. She worked briefly as a public health nurse and in 1944 returned to Vanderbilt as an instructor in Pediatric Nursing. In 1949 she joined the faculty of UCLA where she and Lulu K. Wolf Hassenplug developed the first four year generic basic nursing program in the United States . Dorothy Joh nson was a prolific writer on the subject of nursing theory. Her many publications on this subject profoundly influenced theoretical thinking in nursing during the second half of the 20 th century. She held a strong conviction that continuing improvement of care was the ultimate goal of nursing. Her 1968 paper, entitled, One Conceptual Model of Nursing is a classic contribution to Nursing Literature. After her retirement from UCLA she moved to the Florida coast to pursue her hobby of the study of sea shells. She remained active in retirement as a speaker and advocate for nursing education.
KATHERINE KOLCABA
THEORY OF COMFORT
Catherine Kolcaba was born in Cleveland Ohio, where she spent most of her life. In 1965 she received her diploma in nursing from St. Lukes Hospital School of Nursing in Cleveland. She practiced part time for many years in medical-surgical nursing, long term care and home care before returning to school. In 1987, she graduated in the first RN to MSN class at the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, Case Western Reserved University, with a specialty in gerontology. While going to school, Kolcaba job shared a head nurse position on a dementia unit. In the context of that unit, she begun theorizing about the outcome of comfort.
Following graduation with her masters degree in nursing, Kolcaba joined the faculty at the University of Akron College of Nursing. Since that time she has maintained American Nurses Association Certification in Gerontology. She returned to Case Western Reserved University to pursue her doctorate in nursing on a part time basis while continuing to teach full time. Over the next ten years, she used coursed work from
Theoretical Sources
Kolcaba originally begun her theoretical work when she diagrammed her nursing practiced early in her Doctoral work. When Kolcaba
The first step, the promised concept analysis, begun with an extensive review of the literature about comfort from the disciplines of nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics and English ( specifically Shakespeares use of comfort and the Oxford English dictionary, which traces origins of words.) from 1900 to 1929, comfort was the central goal of nursing and
Comfort is positive, it is achieved with the help of nurses and in some cases, in indicates an improvement from previous state or condition. Intuitively, comfort is associated with a nurturing activity. From its origins,
Four Major Tenets about the Nature of Holistic Comfort 1. Comfort is generally state
specific. 2. The outcome of comfort is sensitive to changes over time. 3. Any consistently applied holistic nursing intervention
Health Care Needs Kolcaba defines health care needs as needs for comfort, arising from a stressful healthcare situations, that cannot be met by recipients traditional support systems. These needs include physical,
Comfort Measures Comfort measures are defined as nursing interventions designed to address specific comfort needs of recipients, including physiological, social,
Intervening Variables Intervening variables are defined as interacting forces that influence recipients perception of total. These consist of variables such as past experiences, age,
Comfort Comfort is defined as the state that is experienced by recipients of comfort measures. It is the immediate and holistic experience of being strengthened through having
Kolcaba derived the context on which comfort is experienced from the literature on holism and she defined them as: Physical: pertaining to bodily sensation. Psychospiritual: pertaining to internal awareness of self, including esteem, self concept, sexuality and meaning in life; relationship to a higher order or being. Environmental: pertaining to external surroundings, conditions and influences. Social: pertaining to interpersonal, family, and societal relationship.
ADPCN
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
NCR
II
IV 2004
VI 2005
VIII
XII
ADCPN Data
1000 800 600 400 200 0 2005 2004
5. Expert
Mentors Wanted
Mentors do more than teach skills They facilitate new learning experiences Help new nurses make career decisions Introduce them to networks of colleagues who can provide new professional challenges and opportunities Mentors are interactive sounding boards who help others make decisions
ADPCN data
2004 83 38 13 41 50 23 19 23 11 11 18 21 5 2005 93 46 15 48 64 25 20 31 13 16 22 21 6
EGIONS NCRReg I and CAR Reg II Reg III Reg IV Region V Reg VI Reg VII Reg VIII Reg IX Reg X Reg XI Reg XII Reg XIII