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19 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Characteristics:
- Meet needs according to own priorities
- Basic needs usually must be met, some other needs can be deferred
- Failure to meet needs results in illness
- Can be felt by external or internal stimuli
- Needs can be met in different ways
- Needs are interrelated
Human Needs

Individuals who meet basic human needs are happier, healthier, and more effective.
The value one has for oneself; self-confidence
Self-Esteem
The collection of ideas, feelings, and beliefs one has about oneself
Self-Concept
- Physical change and increase in size

- Can be measured quantitatively

- Takes place in 1st 20 years of life
Growth
- An increase in the complexity of function and skill progression

- It is the capacity and skill of a person to adapt to the environment

- Continues throughout life
Development
- Concern for the next generation

- Altruistic (showing unselfish concern for the welfare of others)
Generativity
- Unable to expand interests

- Does not accept responsibilities

- Withdrawn, isolated

- Self-indulgent
Stagnation
- Difficult to define
- Individually expressed and highly personal
- Evolves from life experiences
- Physiologic, psychosocial, and cultural influences
- No normal, universal sexual behaviors; varies among cultures and religion
Sexuality
Characteristics:
- Knowledge about sexuality and sexual behavior
- Ability to express one's full sexual potential
- Ability to make autonomous decisions
- Experience of sexual pleasure
- Capability to express sexuality through communication, touch, emotions, and love
- Right to make free and responsible reproductive choices
- Ability to access sexual healthcare
Sexual Health
5 critical components:
- Sexual self-concept
- Body image
- Gender identity
- Gender role behavior
- Freedoms & responsibilites
Sexual Health
The state in which an individual experiences a change in sexual function during the sexual response phases of desire, excitation, and/or orgasm that is viewed as unsatisfying, unrewarding, or inadequate
Sexual Dysfunction
An infectious disease usually acquired by sexual intercourse or genital contact. These diseases are among the most common communicable diseases, and the incidence has risen in recent years despite improved methods of diagnosis and treatment
Sexual Transmitted Disease (STD)
- The part of a being human that seeks meaningfulness through intra-, inter-, and transpersonal connection.

- Belief in or relationship with some higher power, creative force, divine being, or infinite source of energy

Aspects: Meaning, Value, Transcendence, Connecting, Becoming
Spirituality
- A feeling of inner peace and of being generally alive, purposeful and fulfilled; the feeling is rooted in spiritual values and/or specific religious beliefs

- A way of living, a lifestyle that views and lives life as purposeful and pleasurable, life-sustaining, life-enriching deeply rooted in spiritual values

- Connectedness with self, others, higher power, all life, nature, and universe that transcends and empowers self
Spiritual Well-Being
A disturbance in or challenge to a person's belief or value system that provides strength, hope, and meaning to life

Example of Causes:
Physiological problems, pain, loss of body part or function, miscarriage or stillbirth, death or illness of loved one, inability to practice spiritual rituals
Spiritual Distress
An active "mode of being-in-relation" to another or others in which we invest commitment, belief, love, and hope
Faith
A multidimensional concept that includes perceiving realistic expectations and goals, having motivation to achieve goals, anticipating outcomes, establishing trust and interpersonal relationships, relying on internal and external resources, having determination to endure, and being oriented to the future
Hope
- An organized system of beliefs and practices (worship)

- Guidance for believers in responding to life's questions and challenges
Religion
Characteristics:
- Alterations in achieving sexual satisfaction or in the perceived sex role
- Actual or perceived limitations imposed by disease or by therapy
- Change of interest in others or in self
- Inability to achieve desired satisfaction
- Perceived deficiency of sexual desire
- A search for confirmation of desirability
- Verbalization of the problem
Sexual Dysfunction