Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Humanistic Nursing Theory
Humanistic Nursing Theory
NURSING
THEORY
Dr. Josephine
Paterson
Dr. Loretta Zderad
BIOGRAPHY
BIOGRAPHY
Josephine
She
Nine
Her
Dr.
She
She
Zderad
She
She
Dr.
She
Paterson
Friendship
years.
HUMANISTIC NURSING
Embraces
Paterson
IMPLICIT ASSUMPTIONS
Nursing
Nurses
Every
Human
All
Nurses
Human
THEORETICAL
ASSERTIONS
Through
Humanistic
nursing practice is
developed from the lived experiences of
the nurse and the person receiving care.
The
The
3 CONCEPTS PROVIDING
THE BASIS OF NURSING
DIALOGUE
Presence
Relating
Meeting
is characterized by the expectation
that there will be a nurse and a nursed
Relating
is a process of nurse-nursed doing
with each other
Subject Subject Relating
"I-Thou" is a coming to know the other and the
self in relation, intuitively.
Presence
is the quality of being open,
receptive, ready, and available to
another person
Call and Response
nurses and clients call and
respond to each other both
verbally and nonverbally
COMMUNITY
PHENOMENOLOGIC
NURSOLOGY
5 PHASES OF HUMANISTIC
NURSING INQUIRY
Preparation
Nurse
Succession
NURSING
METAPARADIGM
NURSING
Is a nurturing response of one person to
another in a time of need that aims toward
the development of well-being and more
being
HEALTH
MAN
ENVIRONMENT
CONCEPTUAL MODEL
CONCEPTUAL
FRAMEWORK
EVIDENCE BASED
PRACTICE
BACKGROUND:
The World Health Organization has
characterized the need for expert, palliative
and end-of-life care as a top priority for
global health care. The specialty of hospice
and palliative care nursing embraces a
humanistic caring and holistic approach to
patient care. As this resonates with
Paterson and Zderad's Humanistic Nursing
Theory, an understanding of hospice
nurses' experiences can be investigated by
application of relevant constructs in the
theory.
DATA SOURCES:
This article is based on Paterson and
Zderad's publications and other theoretical
and research articles and books focused on
Humanistic Nursing Theory (1976-2009), and
data from a phenomenological study of the
lived experience of Taiwanese hospice
nurses conducted in 2007.
DISCUSSION:
Theoretical concepts relevant to hospice and
palliative nursing included call-and-response,
inter-subjective transaction, and uniquenessotherness.
CONCLUSION:
Use of core concepts from Humanistic Nursing
Theory can provide a unifying language for
planning care and describing interventions.
Future research efforts in hospice and palliative
nursing should define and evaluate these
concepts for efficacy in practice settings.
THANK
YOU!