The role of a nurse in providing professional, compassionate care. Introduction This assignment will discuss the role of the nurse in providing care in relation to the 6C’s of nursing practice which include care, compassion, competence, communication, courage and commitment. (NHS England, 2012). These principles form the benchmark of the NHS culture of compassionate care and underpins everything it does.…
Nurses are on the frontlines of healthcare delivery and they carry a responsibility for providing care to clients in the most ethical way possible. It is vital for all nurses to possess ethical knowledge so they may conduct their actions appropriately, diffuse tense situations, and give safe and efficient care in today 's changing world. In practical care, the question to answer is: “What can I do?” The answer lies in the context of ethical principles. Ethical care seeks the best way to provide care by using the best nursing function.…
Nursing Theory Analysis Paper: The Philosophy of Jean Watson and her Theory of Human Caring Jean Watson is a caring and compassionate individual who has devoted her life’s work to the phenomena of human caring within the nursing practice (Watson, 2016a). Her Theory of Human Caring is a middle-range theory that focuses on the spiritual experience between the healthcare professional and the patient that can often be overlooked by medical science (Watson, 2016a). Further discussion will reveal how Watson’s theory facilitates healing through the caring practices that nurses perform daily. Her theory focuses on strengthening the bond between the nurse and patient and has also introduced the clinical Caritas process into the nursing profession.…
Jean Watson’s definition of nursing is, “A human science of persons and human health-illness experiences that are mediated by professional, personal, scientific, aesthetic, and ethical human care transactions.” (Boore, McCance, McKenna, 1999). To go hand-in-hand with Watson’s definition of nursing, her definition of care is, “A value and an attitude that has to become a will, an intention, or a commitment that manifests itself in concrete acts.” (Boore, McCance, McKenna, 1999). Watson made human caring apart of her definition as nursing, and personally, that it what drew my attention to her as a theorist, because I firmly believe that a nurse cannot be a great nurse without having a caring attitude and the ability to show empathy to others.…
Preservation of Dignity and Compassionate Care: A Philosophy of Nursing Rachel Bock Rush University Preservation of Dignity and Compassionate Care: A Philosophy of Nursing Nursing is a helping profession that is intimately tied to human life. As such, nurses must be able to steadily navigate life’s spectrum of experience– ranging from triumph to tragedy – alongside those whom they serve. It is a journey that requires resilience, dedication, and a strong sense of purpose, all of which must be grounded in personal conviction and philosophy. This philosophy should include the belief that all people have value, and as such, deserve compassionate, holistic care that conserves their dignity and autonomy (Wueste, 2005).…
In Watson’s caring model, nurse’s care about the uniqueness of the individual and go to all extends to preserve the dignity of a patient. In transpersonal caring, nurses will make an intentional connection with the patient. In the third element…
The Help, written by Kathryn Stockett, is a novel that describes the lives of African American maids and the white families they work for. They clean, cook, take care of white children, run errands, and do many other things. They also work for less than minimum wage. The novel is set in Jackson, Mississippi during the 1960’s. This time period was right after the Civil War and many African American people were fighting hard for equal rights.…
Ethics of Care – Feminist Perspective. Ethics of care, through the feminist lens, presents diverse care perspectives. In a Different Voice, Gilligan (1982) introduced an ethic of care that would challenge the assertion that girls acquired principled adulthood at a slower pace and that their intelligence was substandard in comparison to boys (Held, 2006). This empirical work by Gilligan (1982) focused on how more women participants had a different voice regarding caring about caring, in contrast to the men participants. However, not everyone agreed with her findings and viewed her study as a reproach of two moral views, the justice perspective and a care perspective (Held, 2006; Koggel & Orme, 2010).…
Attentiveness: This implies paying attention and the discovery of the need of the patients, such as the patient in the unit with a back pain. In this patient situation, the failure of the nurse to assess and recognize the patient’s need for pain medication will demonstrate a lack of caring from the nurse and the patient will not experience caring (Lachman, 2012). Responsibility: This encompasses having the obligation and moral principle to care for the patients, to be honest, and respectful about the patients’ health care status (Lachman, 2012).…
I chose to be a nurse simply because i always desired to take care of other people since i was young, i did not like to see people suffering. It would always make me feel better if i knew i helped someone else who was not doing so good. When my grandfather was dying i took care of him at the tender age of sixteen this is when i knew my calling was to be a nurse. Nursing is more than treating an illness;it is protection, promotion and optimization of health and abilities, prevention of illness and injury, facilitation of healing, alleviation of suffering through the diagnosis and treatment of human response advocacy in the care of individuals, families, groups, communities and populations( Nursingworld.org) According to Dorothea Orem’s self care deficit theory our purpose as a nurses is to care for individuals well or sick, acting and doing for another, guiding and directing patients, providing physical and psychological support and teaching(Masters pg 59). My philosophy for nursing is providing my patients with compassionate care while at the same time respecting their dignity.…
Is when nurse managers can implement an affection of humankind, and when they can influence the staff nurses to participate in self-care activities. The staffing is critical when conveying care for a patient. Nurses can exercise how to present love and kindness for them self as well as for others. Having guidelines that promote healthy work activities, and decreasing the call-ins back to work can allow nurses to rest and refresh. These valuable points shows how combining the theory of human caring with these points could play a major part on the nurses work settings, and their own view of how to be cared for.…
As a nursing student, I feel it is important to familiarize myself with various nursing literature to enhance my knowledge on nursing practice and to shape the type of nurse I want to become. The way I want to structure my future career is centered around the concept of empathy, which is what I will be discussing in this paper. The purpose of this paper is to become aware of my views, attitudes, and how my experiences will affect my nursing practice. I will first examine how an effective therapeutic nurse-client relationship can be developed from the use of empathy and how the patient is positively affected by this skill.…
(Watson, 1988, p.14) Watson defines nursing as a “human science of persons and human health-illness experiences that are mediated by professional, personal, scientific, esthetic and ethical human transactions” (George, 2010). The practice of caring, if utilizing Jean Watson’s theory, is vital to…
Philosophical orientation Nightingale’s philosophy is based on three domains healing, leadership and global action (Selanders, Louise C, & Crane, Patrick, 2012). However, her priority was essentially on the patient and the environment in which nurses manipulate the environment to improve patient recovery (Dossey, 2002). To Nightingale, nurses needed to be involved in health promotion and health teaching with the ill patient and with healthy individuals. She didn’t agree that nurses were meant to be inferior to physicians, but she considered nursing as an independent profession (book). Even though nightingale’s philosophy was about the environment, she also believed that a holistic care should be included.…
The fundamentals of nursing define the beliefs and behaviors, thereby applying the knowledge, skills and attitudes minimizes various health problems. The purpose of knowing the basis is to promote and improve health, as well as maintain the quality of life of others. Finkelman and Kenner (2010) describe Florence Nightingale as an influential nursing theorist who initiated holistic care in the nursing practice and pioneered the art of nursing as nursing quality that places the person in the best light for healing. Nightingale’s theory is centered on healing of the whole person with the use of the environment to promote wellness. Nursing care is tailored to the unique individual in a holistic manner, healing the person as a whole, including…