YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Jean Watsons Nursing Theories
Essays 241 - 270
own studies in numerous areas, such as formal logic, metaphysics, action theories, and to her readings of Aristotle, Aquinas and m...
relations. Nurses must assess person and environment in relation to their impact on health. Both person and environment can vary...
awareness of the self within the context of the environment grows in association with each other in a manner that allows the indiv...
indicate the patients readiness for growth and movement" (Marchese, 2006, p. 364). Phase 1, orientation, describes the patient and...
Based on their results, the authors suggested nurse educators add more critical thinking exercises to their classroom curriculum. ...
In five pages this paper examines Rousseau's On the Origin of Inequality and Locke's Two Treatises of Government in a comparative ...
at the essential nature of man. The nature of man is such that it is a favorite subject of philosophers. Hobbes for example sees t...
expectation of its students, she asserts, is defined by their social status and economic background. In this way, they are encour...
thought themselves are qualitatively different from one another. In other words, according to Piaget, the way individuals think at...
to health care. Many of the same questions that can apply to assessing the validity of qualitative research can be used to ...
incremental. It occurs in small steps, each of which are interspersed with a period of adjustment. This can be useful in staffin...
general systems model serves as an example. Nursing research formerly was purely quantitative in design, and any qualitativ...
a profession, nursing theory has responded to meet the needs of nurses. For example, from the mid-1970s through the 1980s, the foc...
also possess knowledge concerning a particular family as a whole, including the intricacies of its family system, the position of ...
nursing from the time when Florence Nightingale founded modern nursing in the nineteenth century. Since Nightingale, a variety of ...
The SCDNT regards the meta-paradigm of "Nursing" as an art, that is, a "helping service," but also as a technology ("Dorothea," 20...
This paper is divided into related sections and includes a case scenario to which Leininger's transcultural nursing theory is appl...
prepared for this role" (McKenna, 1997, p. 87). Perhaps most significant of all was Florence Nightingales belief that env...
can readily recognize how teaching reflects the combined components of open communication, creative instruction and critical think...
reporting. Lukas (2004) outlines the problems associated with pain well by pointing out that the potential for postoperative pain ...
An effective and valuable nurse is one who has sound technical knowledge and experience in applying it, but who also is a superlat...
In five pages this paper contrasts and compares these philosophers' theories on government and morality. Six sources are cited in...
are, meaning that their immediate physical conditions affect the likelihood of success of the procedures they are about to undergo...
In five pages this essay examines Moral Judgment of the Child by Jean Piaget in a consideration of his concepts of child moral dev...
In about nine pages short essays consider the contradictions that appear in the theories of Sartre and Hobbes. There is no biblio...
therapeutic manner (Tourville and Ingalls, 2003). This relationship may refer to a single individual, or the "person" may be a sma...
results from alcohol or drug misuse and which interferes with professional judgment and the delivery of safe, high quality care" (...
practitioner surgeries are run by practice nurses, only making referrals to other members of the healthcare team when required, Th...
reality of the profession. It needs a makeover much as it had in the 19th century in Brittan when nursing reformers struggled to h...
implementing the treatment regimen. 5. collaborating with other health care providers in determining the appropriate health care f...