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https://studentshare.org/health-sciences-medicine/1432126-nurse-theorist-jean-watson.
Body According to Nursing Theories (2011), Jean Watson was born in West Virginia in the 1940s. She later studied nursing in the Lewis Gale School of Nursing in the 1960s and she went on to continue her Bachelor’s degree in Nursing at the University of Colorado at Boulder (Nursing Theories, 2011). She also finished her degree in psychiatric and mental health nursing in the same school. She would also graduate with a PhD in Educational Psychology in 1973. She is a professor of Nursing at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and has even served previously as its dean of Nursing.
Her theory in nursing has mostly revolved around Human Caring and Loss. She also has finished and published various books on the science of caring (Nursing Theories, 2011). She highlights the importance of carative factors in the practice of nursing, as well as the importance of nurses developing humanistic value systems in their nursing care and practice. Jean Watson’s Theory of Transpersonal Caring or her Theory of Human Caring was first established in 1979 (Vanguard Health Systems, 2011).
This theory emphasizes the human aspect of nursing care – combined with scientific data and learning. Watson came up with this theory because she believed that caring must be a major part of every nurse’s practice. . In effect, these patients have physiological as well as psychological needs and the nurse must care for both aspects and both needs (Vanguard Health Systems, 2011). Watson also pointed out that it is important for the nurse to express an unconditional acceptance, one which is not based on subjective and prejudicial considerations.
A patient is therefore entitled to the same quality of care as his fellow patients, regardless of his race, gender, religious beliefs, and even his age. Watson also highlights the importance of nurses spending uninterrupted time with patients, allowing caring moments to unfold and take place. In the process, nurses and patients are able to connect with each other and the feeling of trust and rapport can develop between the parties. When such a relationship is established, the patient would feel more at ease, more open to the nurse, and more compliant with the treatment and intervention process.
Moreover, a nurse’s attitude towards the patient also eventually assists in the delivery of effective care to the patient. A nurse’s attitude can make the patient feel comfortable, but it can also make the patient feel small or dull or even a drab (Vanguard Health Systems, 2011). By taking on the right attitude, it is possible for nurses and patients to connect with each other well and establish an efficient plan of care. These spheres are impacted by the person’s view of himself, making him unique to make his own choices.
It is therefore important for me as a nurse to assess and evaluate the patient in the context of his family and of a wider community setting. As a nurse, it is also my role to make the patient’s room a soothing and also a calm and healing place. It may be common for hospital rooms
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