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NURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
KOLCABA'S THEORY OF COMFORT The Theory of Comfort was developed when Katharine Kolcaba conducted a concept analysis of comfort that examined literature from several disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics, and English. After the three forms of comfort and four contexts of holistic human experience were introduced, a taxonomic structure was created to guide for the assessment PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing.NURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
KOLCABA'S THEORY OF COMFORT The Theory of Comfort was developed when Katharine Kolcaba conducted a concept analysis of comfort that examined literature from several disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics, and English. After the three forms of comfort and four contexts of holistic human experience were introduced, a taxonomic structure was created to guide for the assessment PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory. LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning toHOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
NEUMAN'S SYSTEMS MODEL Betty Neuman’s Systems Model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility. The theory focuses on the response of the patient system to actual or potential environmental stressors and the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary nursing prevention intervention for retention, attainment, and maintenance of patient system wellness. LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intentof
NEWMAN’S HEALTH AS EXPANDING CONSCIOUSNESS THEORY Margaret A. Newman was influenced by Martha Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings, Itzhak Bentov’s Concept of the Evolution of Consciousness, Arthur Young’s Theory of Process, and David Bohm’s Theory of Implicate as she developed her model of nursing.. The Health as Expanding Consciousness theory makes the following assumptions: Health encompasses conditions described as illness, or PEPLAU'S THEORY OF INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS Peplau explains that nursing is therapeutic because it is a healing art, assisting a patient who is sick or in need of health care. It is also an interpersonal process because of the interaction between two or more individuals who have a common goal. The nurse and patient work together so both become mature and knowledgeable in the care process. WATSON'S PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE OF CARING The Philosophy and Science of Caring has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing. Jean Watson refers to the human being as “a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self. Human is viewed as greater than and different NIGHTINGALE'S ENVIRONMENT THEORY The ten major concepts of the Environment Theory, also identified as Nightingale’s Canons, are: According to Nightingale, nursing is separate from medicine. The goal of nursing is to put the patient in the best possible condition in order for nature to act. Nursing is “the activities that promote health which occur in any caregiving JOHNSON’S BEHAVIOR SYSTEM MODEL The Behavior System Model of Nursing was developed by Dorothy E. Johnson. It stresses the importance of research-based knowledge about the effect of nursing care on patients. When she first proposed the theory in 1968, she explained that it was to foster “the efficient and effective behavioral functioning in the patient to prevent illnessNURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
KOLCABA'S THEORY OF COMFORT The Theory of Comfort was developed when Katharine Kolcaba conducted a concept analysis of comfort that examined literature from several disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics, and English. After the three forms of comfort and four contexts of holistic human experience were introduced, a taxonomic structure was created to guide for the assessment PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing.NURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
KOLCABA'S THEORY OF COMFORT The Theory of Comfort was developed when Katharine Kolcaba conducted a concept analysis of comfort that examined literature from several disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics, and English. After the three forms of comfort and four contexts of holistic human experience were introduced, a taxonomic structure was created to guide for the assessment PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory. LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning toHOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
NEUMAN'S SYSTEMS MODEL Betty Neuman’s Systems Model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility. The theory focuses on the response of the patient system to actual or potential environmental stressors and the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary nursing prevention intervention for retention, attainment, and maintenance of patient system wellness. LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intentof
NEWMAN’S HEALTH AS EXPANDING CONSCIOUSNESS THEORY Margaret A. Newman was influenced by Martha Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings, Itzhak Bentov’s Concept of the Evolution of Consciousness, Arthur Young’s Theory of Process, and David Bohm’s Theory of Implicate as she developed her model of nursing.. The Health as Expanding Consciousness theory makes the following assumptions: Health encompasses conditions described as illness, or PEPLAU'S THEORY OF INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS Peplau explains that nursing is therapeutic because it is a healing art, assisting a patient who is sick or in need of health care. It is also an interpersonal process because of the interaction between two or more individuals who have a common goal. The nurse and patient work together so both become mature and knowledgeable in the care process. WATSON'S PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE OF CARING The Philosophy and Science of Caring has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing. Jean Watson refers to the human being as “a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self. Human is viewed as greater than and different NIGHTINGALE'S ENVIRONMENT THEORY The ten major concepts of the Environment Theory, also identified as Nightingale’s Canons, are: According to Nightingale, nursing is separate from medicine. The goal of nursing is to put the patient in the best possible condition in order for nature to act. Nursing is “the activities that promote health which occur in any caregiving JOHNSON’S BEHAVIOR SYSTEM MODEL The Behavior System Model of Nursing was developed by Dorothy E. Johnson. It stresses the importance of research-based knowledge about the effect of nursing care on patients. When she first proposed the theory in 1968, she explained that it was to foster “the efficient and effective behavioral functioning in the patient to prevent illnessNURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
REHABILITATION NURSING Rehabilitation Nursing. Rehabilitation nurses work with patients who are recovering from chronic illnesses, injuries or disabilities. Nurses help patients transition to further independence, build strength and mobility, and adapt to their situations in order to care for themselves as much as possible. Rehabilitation nurses work inhospitals
LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning toNURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
REHABILITATION NURSING Rehabilitation Nursing. Rehabilitation nurses work with patients who are recovering from chronic illnesses, injuries or disabilities. Nurses help patients transition to further independence, build strength and mobility, and adapt to their situations in order to care for themselves as much as possible. Rehabilitation nurses work inhospitals
LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning to THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory. LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology.This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning to be rejected and replaced. PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. ROY'S ADAPTATION MODEL OF NURSING The Four Adaptive Modes of Roy’s Adaptation Model are physiologic needs, self-concept, role function, and interdependence. The Adaptation Model includes a six-step nursing process. The first level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s behavior. The second level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s stimuli. BENNER'S FROM NOVICE TO EXPERT Dr. Patricia Benner is a nursing theorist who first developed a model for the stages of clinical competence in her classic book “From Novice to Expert: Excellence and Power in Clinical Nursing Practice”. Her model is one of the most useful frameworks for assessing nurses’ needs at LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intentof
LIFE PERSPECTIVE RHYTHM MODEL Life Perspective Rhythm Model is a construct to assist with the professional practice of nursing. Theorist Dr. Joyce Fitzpatrick based her model of practice on Martha Rogers’ theory of Unitary Human Beings. While Rogers’ theory covered eight separate areas, Dr. Fitzpatrick has built her nursing theory on four subdivisionsinvolving the
NEWMAN’S HEALTH AS EXPANDING CONSCIOUSNESS THEORY Margaret A. Newman was influenced by Martha Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings, Itzhak Bentov’s Concept of the Evolution of Consciousness, Arthur Young’s Theory of Process, and David Bohm’s Theory of Implicate as she developed her model of nursing.. The Health as Expanding Consciousness theory makes the following assumptions: Health encompasses conditions described as illness, orMARTHA E. ROGERS
Biography of Martha E. Rogers. Martha E. Rogers was born in 1914 in Dallas, Texas. She received her nursing diploma from the Knoxville General Hospital School of Nursing in 1936, then earned her Public Health Nursing degree from George Peabody College in Tennessee in1937.
MERCER'S MATERNAL ROLE ATTAINMENT THEORY The nursing process in the Maternal Role Attainment Theory follows four stages of acquisition. They are: anticipatory, formal, informal, and personal. The anticipatory stage is the social and psychological adaptation to the maternal role. This includes learning expectationsand
NURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
REHABILITATION NURSING Rehabilitation Nursing. Rehabilitation nurses work with patients who are recovering from chronic illnesses, injuries or disabilities. Nurses help patients transition to further independence, build strength and mobility, and adapt to their situations in order to care for themselves as much as possible. Rehabilitation nurses work inhospitals
LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning toNURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
REHABILITATION NURSING Rehabilitation Nursing. Rehabilitation nurses work with patients who are recovering from chronic illnesses, injuries or disabilities. Nurses help patients transition to further independence, build strength and mobility, and adapt to their situations in order to care for themselves as much as possible. Rehabilitation nurses work inhospitals
LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning to THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory. LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology.This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning to be rejected and replaced. PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. ROY'S ADAPTATION MODEL OF NURSING The Four Adaptive Modes of Roy’s Adaptation Model are physiologic needs, self-concept, role function, and interdependence. The Adaptation Model includes a six-step nursing process. The first level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s behavior. The second level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s stimuli. BENNER'S FROM NOVICE TO EXPERT Dr. Patricia Benner is a nursing theorist who first developed a model for the stages of clinical competence in her classic book “From Novice to Expert: Excellence and Power in Clinical Nursing Practice”. Her model is one of the most useful frameworks for assessing nurses’ needs at LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intentof
LIFE PERSPECTIVE RHYTHM MODEL Life Perspective Rhythm Model is a construct to assist with the professional practice of nursing. Theorist Dr. Joyce Fitzpatrick based her model of practice on Martha Rogers’ theory of Unitary Human Beings. While Rogers’ theory covered eight separate areas, Dr. Fitzpatrick has built her nursing theory on four subdivisionsinvolving the
NEWMAN’S HEALTH AS EXPANDING CONSCIOUSNESS THEORY Margaret A. Newman was influenced by Martha Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings, Itzhak Bentov’s Concept of the Evolution of Consciousness, Arthur Young’s Theory of Process, and David Bohm’s Theory of Implicate as she developed her model of nursing.. The Health as Expanding Consciousness theory makes the following assumptions: Health encompasses conditions described as illness, orMARTHA E. ROGERS
Biography of Martha E. Rogers. Martha E. Rogers was born in 1914 in Dallas, Texas. She received her nursing diploma from the Knoxville General Hospital School of Nursing in 1936, then earned her Public Health Nursing degree from George Peabody College in Tennessee in1937.
MERCER'S MATERNAL ROLE ATTAINMENT THEORY The nursing process in the Maternal Role Attainment Theory follows four stages of acquisition. They are: anticipatory, formal, informal, and personal. The anticipatory stage is the social and psychological adaptation to the maternal role. This includes learning expectationsand
NURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
REHABILITATION NURSING Rehabilitation Nursing. Rehabilitation nurses work with patients who are recovering from chronic illnesses, injuries or disabilities. Nurses help patients transition to further independence, build strength and mobility, and adapt to their situations in order to care for themselves as much as possible. Rehabilitation nurses work inhospitals
LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning toNURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory.HOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
REHABILITATION NURSING Rehabilitation Nursing. Rehabilitation nurses work with patients who are recovering from chronic illnesses, injuries or disabilities. Nurses help patients transition to further independence, build strength and mobility, and adapt to their situations in order to care for themselves as much as possible. Rehabilitation nurses work inhospitals
LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning to THEORIES & MODELS ARCHIVE 21 Nursing Problems by Faye Abdellah. Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring. Roy’s Adaptation Model of Nursing. Roper-Logan-Tierney’s Model for Nursing Based on a Model of Living. Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings. Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Parse’s Human Becoming Theory. LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology.This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning to be rejected and replaced. PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. ROY'S ADAPTATION MODEL OF NURSING The Four Adaptive Modes of Roy’s Adaptation Model are physiologic needs, self-concept, role function, and interdependence. The Adaptation Model includes a six-step nursing process. The first level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s behavior. The second level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s stimuli. BENNER'S FROM NOVICE TO EXPERT Dr. Patricia Benner is a nursing theorist who first developed a model for the stages of clinical competence in her classic book “From Novice to Expert: Excellence and Power in Clinical Nursing Practice”. Her model is one of the most useful frameworks for assessing nurses’ needs at LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intentof
LIFE PERSPECTIVE RHYTHM MODEL Life Perspective Rhythm Model is a construct to assist with the professional practice of nursing. Theorist Dr. Joyce Fitzpatrick based her model of practice on Martha Rogers’ theory of Unitary Human Beings. While Rogers’ theory covered eight separate areas, Dr. Fitzpatrick has built her nursing theory on four subdivisionsinvolving the
NEWMAN’S HEALTH AS EXPANDING CONSCIOUSNESS THEORY Margaret A. Newman was influenced by Martha Rogers’ Theory of Unitary Human Beings, Itzhak Bentov’s Concept of the Evolution of Consciousness, Arthur Young’s Theory of Process, and David Bohm’s Theory of Implicate as she developed her model of nursing.. The Health as Expanding Consciousness theory makes the following assumptions: Health encompasses conditions described as illness, orMARTHA E. ROGERS
Biography of Martha E. Rogers. Martha E. Rogers was born in 1914 in Dallas, Texas. She received her nursing diploma from the Knoxville General Hospital School of Nursing in 1936, then earned her Public Health Nursing degree from George Peabody College in Tennessee in1937.
MERCER'S MATERNAL ROLE ATTAINMENT THEORY The nursing process in the Maternal Role Attainment Theory follows four stages of acquisition. They are: anticipatory, formal, informal, and personal. The anticipatory stage is the social and psychological adaptation to the maternal role. This includes learning expectationsand
NURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing HENDERSON'S NURSING NEED THEORY The four major concepts addressed in the theory are the individual, the environment, health, and nursing. According to Henderson, individuals have basic needs that are components of health. They may require assistance to achieve health and independence, or assistance to achieve a peaceful death. For the individual, mind and body areinseparable
KOLCABA'S THEORY OF COMFORT The Theory of Comfort was developed when Katharine Kolcaba conducted a concept analysis of comfort that examined literature from several disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics, and English. After the three forms of comfort and four contexts of holistic human experience were introduced, a taxonomic structure was created to guide for the assessment PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. ROY'S ADAPTATION MODEL OF NURSING The Four Adaptive Modes of Roy’s Adaptation Model are physiologic needs, self-concept, role function, and interdependence. The Adaptation Model includes a six-step nursing process. The first level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s behavior. The second level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s stimuli. NEUMAN'S SYSTEMS MODEL Betty Neuman’s Systems Model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility. The theory focuses on the response of the patient system to actual or potential environmental stressors and the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary nursing prevention intervention for retention, attainment, and maintenance of patient system wellness. PENDER'S HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL The Health Promotion Model was designed by Nola J. Pender to be a “complementary counterpart to models of health protection.” It defines health as a positive dynamic state rather than simply the absence of disease. Health promotion is directed at increasing a patient’s level of well-being. LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intent of the care is to fit WATSON'S PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE OF CARING The Philosophy and Science of Caring has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing. Jean Watson refers to the human being as “a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self. Human is viewed as greater than and different BARKER'S TIDAL MODEL OF MENTAL HEALTH RECOVERY Barker’s Tidal Model of Mental Health Recovery is a middle-range theory of nursing that can be used as the basis for interdisciplinary health care. The main focus of the model is on helping individual patients create their own voyage of discovery. Phil Barker defines the Tidal Model as “a philosophical approach to the discovery of mentalNURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing HENDERSON'S NURSING NEED THEORY The four major concepts addressed in the theory are the individual, the environment, health, and nursing. According to Henderson, individuals have basic needs that are components of health. They may require assistance to achieve health and independence, or assistance to achieve a peaceful death. For the individual, mind and body areinseparable
KOLCABA'S THEORY OF COMFORT The Theory of Comfort was developed when Katharine Kolcaba conducted a concept analysis of comfort that examined literature from several disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics, and English. After the three forms of comfort and four contexts of holistic human experience were introduced, a taxonomic structure was created to guide for the assessment PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. ROY'S ADAPTATION MODEL OF NURSING The Four Adaptive Modes of Roy’s Adaptation Model are physiologic needs, self-concept, role function, and interdependence. The Adaptation Model includes a six-step nursing process. The first level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s behavior. The second level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s stimuli. NEUMAN'S SYSTEMS MODEL Betty Neuman’s Systems Model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility. The theory focuses on the response of the patient system to actual or potential environmental stressors and the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary nursing prevention intervention for retention, attainment, and maintenance of patient system wellness. PENDER'S HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL The Health Promotion Model was designed by Nola J. Pender to be a “complementary counterpart to models of health protection.” It defines health as a positive dynamic state rather than simply the absence of disease. Health promotion is directed at increasing a patient’s level of well-being. LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intent of the care is to fit WATSON'S PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE OF CARING The Philosophy and Science of Caring has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing. Jean Watson refers to the human being as “a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self. Human is viewed as greater than and different BARKER'S TIDAL MODEL OF MENTAL HEALTH RECOVERY Barker’s Tidal Model of Mental Health Recovery is a middle-range theory of nursing that can be used as the basis for interdisciplinary health care. The main focus of the model is on helping individual patients create their own voyage of discovery. Phil Barker defines the Tidal Model as “a philosophical approach to the discovery of mental LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning toHOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
NIGHTINGALE'S ENVIRONMENT THEORY The ten major concepts of the Environment Theory, also identified as Nightingale’s Canons, are: According to Nightingale, nursing is separate from medicine. The goal of nursing is to put the patient in the best possible condition in order for nature to act. Nursing is “the activities that promote health which occur in any caregiving BENNER'S FROM NOVICE TO EXPERT Dr. Patricia Benner is a nursing theorist who first developed a model for the stages of clinical competence in her classic book “From Novice to Expert: Excellence and Power in Clinical Nursing Practice”. Her model is one of the most useful frameworks for assessing nurses’ needs atPERINATAL NURSING
Perinatal nursing is the care and support of women and their families before, during, and after childbirth. Perinatal nurses provide education and resources about pregnancy and childbirth, and help oversee the mother and child during pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum to ensure the health of both. LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intentof
NEUMAN'S SYSTEMS MODEL Betty Neuman’s Systems Model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility. The theory focuses on the response of the patient system to actual or potential environmental stressors and the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary nursing prevention intervention for retention, attainment, and maintenance of patient system wellness. WATSON'S PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE OF CARING The Philosophy and Science of Caring has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing. Jean Watson refers to the human being as “a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self. Human is viewed as greater than and different PEPLAU'S THEORY OF INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS Peplau explains that nursing is therapeutic because it is a healing art, assisting a patient who is sick or in need of health care. It is also an interpersonal process because of the interaction between two or more individuals who have a common goal. The nurse and patient work together so both become mature and knowledgeable in the care process.MARTHA E. ROGERS
Biography of Martha E. Rogers. Martha E. Rogers was born in 1914 in Dallas, Texas. She received her nursing diploma from the Knoxville General Hospital School of Nursing in 1936, then earned her Public Health Nursing degree from George Peabody College in Tennessee in1937.
NURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing HENDERSON'S NURSING NEED THEORY The four major concepts addressed in the theory are the individual, the environment, health, and nursing. According to Henderson, individuals have basic needs that are components of health. They may require assistance to achieve health and independence, or assistance to achieve a peaceful death. For the individual, mind and body areinseparable
KOLCABA'S THEORY OF COMFORT The Theory of Comfort was developed when Katharine Kolcaba conducted a concept analysis of comfort that examined literature from several disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics, and English. After the three forms of comfort and four contexts of holistic human experience were introduced, a taxonomic structure was created to guide for the assessment PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. ROY'S ADAPTATION MODEL OF NURSING The Four Adaptive Modes of Roy’s Adaptation Model are physiologic needs, self-concept, role function, and interdependence. The Adaptation Model includes a six-step nursing process. The first level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s behavior. The second level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s stimuli. NEUMAN'S SYSTEMS MODEL Betty Neuman’s Systems Model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility. The theory focuses on the response of the patient system to actual or potential environmental stressors and the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary nursing prevention intervention for retention, attainment, and maintenance of patient system wellness. PENDER'S HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL The Health Promotion Model was designed by Nola J. Pender to be a “complementary counterpart to models of health protection.” It defines health as a positive dynamic state rather than simply the absence of disease. Health promotion is directed at increasing a patient’s level of well-being. LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intent of the care is to fit WATSON'S PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE OF CARING The Philosophy and Science of Caring has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing. Jean Watson refers to the human being as “a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self. Human is viewed as greater than and different BARKER'S TIDAL MODEL OF MENTAL HEALTH RECOVERY Barker’s Tidal Model of Mental Health Recovery is a middle-range theory of nursing that can be used as the basis for interdisciplinary health care. The main focus of the model is on helping individual patients create their own voyage of discovery. Phil Barker defines the Tidal Model as “a philosophical approach to the discovery of mentalNURSING THEORY
The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list Continue reading "Nursing HENDERSON'S NURSING NEED THEORY The four major concepts addressed in the theory are the individual, the environment, health, and nursing. According to Henderson, individuals have basic needs that are components of health. They may require assistance to achieve health and independence, or assistance to achieve a peaceful death. For the individual, mind and body areinseparable
KOLCABA'S THEORY OF COMFORT The Theory of Comfort was developed when Katharine Kolcaba conducted a concept analysis of comfort that examined literature from several disciplines, including nursing, medicine, psychology, psychiatry, ergonomics, and English. After the three forms of comfort and four contexts of holistic human experience were introduced, a taxonomic structure was created to guide for the assessment PARSE'S HUMAN BECOMING THEORY Parse’s Human Becoming Theory guides the practice of nurses to focus on quality of life as it is described and lived. The human becoming theory of nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach as well as the bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach of most other theories and models of nursing. ROY'S ADAPTATION MODEL OF NURSING The Four Adaptive Modes of Roy’s Adaptation Model are physiologic needs, self-concept, role function, and interdependence. The Adaptation Model includes a six-step nursing process. The first level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s behavior. The second level of assessment, which addresses the patient’s stimuli. NEUMAN'S SYSTEMS MODEL Betty Neuman’s Systems Model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility. The theory focuses on the response of the patient system to actual or potential environmental stressors and the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary nursing prevention intervention for retention, attainment, and maintenance of patient system wellness. PENDER'S HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL The Health Promotion Model was designed by Nola J. Pender to be a “complementary counterpart to models of health protection.” It defines health as a positive dynamic state rather than simply the absence of disease. Health promotion is directed at increasing a patient’s level of well-being. LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intent of the care is to fit WATSON'S PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE OF CARING The Philosophy and Science of Caring has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing. Jean Watson refers to the human being as “a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self. Human is viewed as greater than and different BARKER'S TIDAL MODEL OF MENTAL HEALTH RECOVERY Barker’s Tidal Model of Mental Health Recovery is a middle-range theory of nursing that can be used as the basis for interdisciplinary health care. The main focus of the model is on helping individual patients create their own voyage of discovery. Phil Barker defines the Tidal Model as “a philosophical approach to the discovery of mental LEWIN'S CHANGE THEORY Lewin's Change Theory. The Change Theory of Nursing was developed by Kurt Lewin, who is considered the father of social psychology. This theory is his most influential theory. He theorized a three-stage model of change known as unfreezing-change-refreeze model that requires prior learning toHOME HEALTH NURSING
Home Health Nurses, also called visiting nurses, provide health care for people in their homes. They may need care after surgery, recovering from an illness or injury, due to disability, or because they are frail. Home health nursing encompasses a range of skills and knowledge, providing general health assessment and care for patients,as well
NIGHTINGALE'S ENVIRONMENT THEORY The ten major concepts of the Environment Theory, also identified as Nightingale’s Canons, are: According to Nightingale, nursing is separate from medicine. The goal of nursing is to put the patient in the best possible condition in order for nature to act. Nursing is “the activities that promote health which occur in any caregiving BENNER'S FROM NOVICE TO EXPERT Dr. Patricia Benner is a nursing theorist who first developed a model for the stages of clinical competence in her classic book “From Novice to Expert: Excellence and Power in Clinical Nursing Practice”. Her model is one of the most useful frameworks for assessing nurses’ needs atPERINATAL NURSING
Perinatal nursing is the care and support of women and their families before, during, and after childbirth. Perinatal nurses provide education and resources about pregnancy and childbirth, and help oversee the mother and child during pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum to ensure the health of both. LEININGER'S CULTURE CARE THEORY Leininger’s Culture Care Theory attempts to provide culturally congruent nursing care through “cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual, group’s, or institution’s cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways.”. The intentof
NEUMAN'S SYSTEMS MODEL Betty Neuman’s Systems Model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility. The theory focuses on the response of the patient system to actual or potential environmental stressors and the use of primary, secondary, and tertiary nursing prevention intervention for retention, attainment, and maintenance of patient system wellness. WATSON'S PHILOSOPHY AND SCIENCE OF CARING The Philosophy and Science of Caring has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing. Jean Watson refers to the human being as “a valued person in and of him or herself to be cared for, respected, nurtured, understood and assisted; in general a philosophical view of a person as a fully functional integrated self. Human is viewed as greater than and different PEPLAU'S THEORY OF INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS Peplau explains that nursing is therapeutic because it is a healing art, assisting a patient who is sick or in need of health care. It is also an interpersonal process because of the interaction between two or more individuals who have a common goal. The nurse and patient work together so both become mature and knowledgeable in the care process.MARTHA E. ROGERS
Biography of Martha E. Rogers. Martha E. Rogers was born in 1914 in Dallas, Texas. She received her nursing diploma from the Knoxville General Hospital School of Nursing in 1936, then earned her Public Health Nursing degree from George Peabody College in Tennessee in1937.
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The nursing profession has evolved greatly over time. Moving from dependence upon total medical direction providing basic care into an independent practice modality, nursing has its own nursing theory practice, nursing models, and distinct nursing interventions. Nursing theories have been developed by a large number of leaders in the nursing field. Below is a list of major nursing theorists who have contributed to the development of professional nursing practice into what it is today:NURSING THEORISTS
* Faye Abdellah
* Phil Barker
* Patricia Benner
* Helen C. Erickson
* Katie Eriksson
* Lydia E. Hall
* Virginia Henderson * Dorothy E. Johnson* Imogene King
* Katharine Kolcaba
* Madeleine Leininger * Myra Estrine Levine* Kurt Lewin
* Ramona Mercer
* Betty Neuman
* Margaret A. Newman * Florence Nightingale* Ida Jean Orlando
* Dorothea E. Orem
* Rosemarie Rizzo Parse* Nola Pender
* Hildegard Peplau
* Isabel Hampton Robb* Martha E. Rogers
* Nancy Roper
* Sister Callista Roy * Henry Stack-Sullivan* Joyce Travelbee
* Jean Watson
* Ernestine Wiedenbach EVIDENCE-BASED NURSING Part of learning to be a nurse is learning about how to nurse. That is, a nurse must learn different nursing theories, methods, and research in order to be able to practice as a nurse in the health carefield.
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DEFINITION OF NURSING From the earliest nuns who cared for the sick and dying to the modern men and women who work in hospitals, clinics, and homes to help people achieve and maintain health, nursing is a way to get involved in the health care industry and work with patients on a personal level.View Details
NURSING TECHNIQUES
Part of working as a nurse is deciding how to approach and care for individual patients and their families. As with any career involving people, there is no set formula on how to deal with and treatpatients.
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