Two Nursing Theories: Theory on Human Caring and Theory of Adaptation

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Jean Watson is a well-respected American nursing theorist who created the Theory on Human Caring. Watson’s concept on caring for a human being is simple, yet has much depth and meaning, and holds strong for nurses to work with compassion, wisdom, love, and caring. The Theory on Human Caring is necessary for every nurse, as it is our job to care for others in a genuine and sensitive way. The theory is extensive; its core foundation is based on nine concepts all interrelated and primarily focused on a nurse giving a patient care with compassion, wisdom, love, and caring (Watson, J., 1999). The nine essential aspects consist of: values, faith-hope, sensitivity, trust, feelings, decision-making, teaching-learning, environment, and human needs. Watson also created the Caritas Process consists of ten different ways of giving care: 1. Practice loving kindness with self and others. 2. Instill faith and hope and honor others. 3. Be sensitive to self and others by nurturing individual beliefs and practices. 4. Develop helping – trusting- caring relationships. 5. Promote and accept positive and negative feelings as you authentically listen. 6. Use creative scientific problem-solving methods for caring decision making. 7. Share teaching and learning that addresses the individual needs and comprehension styles. 8. Create a healing environment for the physical and spiritual self, which respects human dignity. 9. Assist with basic physical, emotional, and spiritual human needs. 10. Open to mystery and Allow miracles to enter ("Caring Moments, Caring Occasions," 2013, p. 3). It reminds us that every patient is human, in some type of crisis, vulnerable to the environment, deserves respect, and is in need of skilled/knowledgeable nursing care. A nu... ... middle of paper ... ...as been adopted by many healthcare organizations. (slide 8) Impact of Roys’s Adaptation Theory on Nursing Roy’s adaptation theory has had a significant impact on nursing and the way we view and approach patient care. It is a systemic approach to understanding and addressing the physiological, self-concept, role function and interdependence needs of a patient and helping them adapt to their environment. By addressing each of theses needs we are able to treat them as a whole. It can be compared to the web of causation in that just as there are many factors that influence disease, by understanding addressing each factor individually, nurses can better treat the disease as a whole. Nurses can benefit by utilizing Roy’s adaptation theory during the nursing process to assist them with conducting a more thorough assessment and developing a more effective care plan.

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