Chapter 4 - Theory Foundations of Nursing
Environment/Situation
- directly affects the patient - healthcare settings (clinics, hospitals) Ex. a teen with diabetes --> their environment may affect them in the sense that their diet may be impacted and how/when they administer insulin injections
Shared Theory: Leadership/Management
- how to lead people - how to change people
Curriculum Era (1900-1940s)
- liberal arts curriculum = includes social sciences (sociology, psych) - Makes students well rounded - Pharmacology
Peplau's phase: Pre-orientation
- listening to report - looking at chart *Gather data*
Shared Theory: Eduational
- provide patient education - adult learning theories
Nightingales Environmental Theory
- theory focuses on environment (light, noise, cleanliness, etc.) - believed she could manipulate the environment to improve patients health - looked to improve sanitary conditions - improved survival rates of patients by manipulating the environment * GRAND THEORY FOCUSED ON ENVIRONMENT *
Nursing process
1. Assessment --> gather data 2. Diagnosis --> care plan 3. Planning --> Make Goals 4. Implementation --> put interventions into action 5. Evaluation --> looking back at the progress of patient; Evaluate progress towards goal
according to Peplau, a nurse is what 3 things?
1. Counselor 2. Resource 3. Surrogate
Theory Utilization Era
21th century, provide EBP
Metaparadigm of Nursing
4 concepts of nursing: 1. person 2. health 3. environment/situation 4. Nursing definition
Susan is a new nurse who tutors a nursing student, Bill, who has difficulty mastering good study habits and prioritizing school assignments. Susan is helping Bill learn the theoretical foundations of nursing practice. After Susan and Bill review interdisciplinary theories, such as Maslow's hierarchy of needs and the developmental theories, they move on to the topic of nursing theories. Q. Bill reads about the concept of culturally specific nursing care. The theory that integrates patients' cultural traditions, values and beliefs into care plans is ______________.
= Leininger
Definitions: Operational
= We have to be able to measure it Ex. measuring patients pain on a scale of 0-10
Henderson's theory
= assisting patient with 14 activities that they may not be able to do on their own and assisting patient with peaceful death - a few activities include hygiene and positioning
Relationship Between Nursing Theory and Nursing Research: Theory testing research
= describes Ex. research study where patients describe the pain with heart disease
Relationship Between Nursing Theory and Nursing Research: Theory Generating Research
= explains relationships ex. a patient experiences sadness with a child with a mental/intellectual disability (relationship between the mental illness and sadness)
Shared Theory: developmental Theory
= growth and development - changing care based on the age/level of development
Roy's Theory
= helps patients adapt to major changes ex. new amputee * they must adapt physically, emotionally, and mentally to their new life*
Neuman's Theory
= how to help patients cope with stress focuses = stress coping mechanisms + disease prevention
Feedback
= how well a system is functioning - patient satisfactory surveys - family feedback
Content
= product information and interventions - interventions --> teaching about BP meds; Teaching diet control
Assumptions
= statements we take for granted Ex. Watson's theory on caring --> Assumption that caring promotes healing
Shared Theory: stress/adaptation theory
= teaching patients how to cope with illness = teaching how to cope with stress of Nursing Discipline
Shared Theory: Biomedical Theory
= theories that cause diseases
Theory is essential to nursing practice because it: (Select all that apply.) A. Contributes to nursing knowledge. B. Predicts patient behaviors in situations. C. Provides a means of assessing patient vital signs. (asses vital signs through nursing process) D. Guides nursing practice. E. Formulates health care legislation. F. Explains relationships between concepts.
A. Contributes to nursing knowledge. B. Predicts patient behaviors in situations. D. Guides nursing practice. F. Explains relationships between concepts.
Systems Theory
A. Input/Output B. Feedback C. Content **Nursing process is systematic (NOT A THEORY)
Which of the following statements related to theory-based nursing practice are correct? (Select all that apply.) A. Nursing theory differentiates nursing from other disciplines. B. Nursing theories are standardized and do not change over time. C. Integrating theory into practice promotes coordinated care delivery. D. Nursing knowledge is generated by theory. E. The theory of nursing process is used in planning patient care. F. Evidence-based practice results from theory-testing research.
A. Nursing theory differentiates nursing from other disciplines. C. Integrating theory into practice promotes coordinated care delivery. D. Nursing knowledge is generated by theory. F. Evidence-based practice results from theory-testing research.
A nurse is caring for a patient who recently lost a leg in a motor vehicle accident. The nurse best assists the patient to cope with this situation by applying which of the following theories? A. Roy B. Watson C. Johnson D. Benner
A. Roy
Nursing theories provide nurses with perspectives from which to: A. analyze patient data. B. predict phenomena. (nursing theories predict nursing care, not phenomena) C. formulate legislation. D. link science to nursing. (nursing theories link nursing to science)
A. analyze patient data.
Components of a theory
A. phenomenon B. Concepts C. Definitions D. Assumptions
Nursing process is central to nursing practice. Nursing practice: A. is a theory. B is derived from a theory. C. is not adaptable to all patients. D. generates knowledge for use in practice.
B is derived from a theory.
Using Maslow's hierarchy of needs, identify the priority for a patient who is experiencing chest pain and difficulty breathing. A. Self-actualization B. Air, water, and nutrition C. Safety D. Esteem and self-esteem needs
B. Air, water, and nutrition
Susan is a new nurse who tutors a nursing student, Bill, who has difficulty mastering good study habits and prioritizing school assignments. Susan is helping Bill learn the theoretical foundations of nursing practice. After Susan and Bill review interdisciplinary theories, such as Maslow's hierarchy of needs and the developmental theories, they move on to the topic of nursing theories. Q. Susan quizzes Bill about the core concept of Peplau's theory. Peplau's theory has only three phases, including orientation, working, and resolution. A. True B. False
B. False * phases = pre-orientation, orientation, working, resolution
The nurse is caring for a patient admitted to the neurological unit with the diagnosis of a stroke and right-sided weakness. The nurse assumes responsibility for bathing and feeding the patient until the patient can begin performing these activities. The nurse in this situation is applying the theory developed by: A. Johnson. B. Orem. C. Roy. D. Peplau.
B. Orem.
Concepts
Both abstract and concrete Ex. abstract --> emotions (can't physically touch emotions) Ex. concrete --> the healthcare environment (decreasing Noise, cleanliness)
Which of the following categories of shared theories would be most appropriate for a patient who is grieving the loss of a spouse? A. Biomedical B. Leadership C. Psychosocial D. Developmental
C. Psychosocial
Input/Output
Input = collect data through assessment skills - subjective data --> what the patient says - objective data --> what you see, hear, smell, feel * see the patient gasping for air * hear lung and heart sounds * smell the foul odor of an infected wound * touch/feel pulse EX. Blood Pressure - elevated BP = input Output = end product of system - evaluate progress of patient Ex. evaluate BP and see if it has improved, worsened, or stayed the same
Nursing Theory Generates...
Knowledge
Theory Era (1980-1990s)
Nurses began providing care with EBP (research)
Research Era (1950-1970s)
Nurses began to conduct research studies
Bullying video: Passive communication skills as a target
passive communicators avoid conflict - easy going - "whatever is easier", "whatever you want to do", "it doesn't matter to me" - speak in an extreme apologetic manner FIX = be assertive; clear and respectful
Domain of nursing
perspective of nursing
Shared Theories
using theories from other disciplines
Prescriptive Theory
- Address nursing interventions for a phenomenon, guide practice change, and predict the consequences - testing a nursing intervention ex. if you believe meditation can relieve headaches, you can test it
Descriptive Theory
- Describe phenomena and identify circumstances in which phenomena occur -Growth + Development - Ex. how a person matures as they age
Shared Theory: Maslows Hierarchy of Human Needs
- Focuses on human needs From base to peak: a. Physiological Needs (food, water) b. Safety (fall risks, socks with grips) c. Social Needs (family, 24 hour visiting) d. Self esteem needs e. Self actualization
Middle-Range Theory
- Less abstract, limited in scope - focuses on concept Ex. Caring = caring promotes healing
Practice Theory
- Narrow in scope and focus - Theories we bring to the bedside Ex. a mom pyschologically adapts to baby after birth
Graduate education era (1950-1970s)
- Nursing began to publish journals - Nursing conferences - Doctoral programs --> encourages higher degree of education
Grand Theory
- abstract, broad in scope, complex - Ex. Florence Nightingales Theory of Environment - focuses on the Metaparadigm (People, Health, Nursing, Environment)
Person
- as a novice, you will be taking care of one patient at a time in clinical - OB and PEDS --> taking care of families - Communities Patient --> families --> communities
Bullying video: Lack of self confidence as a target
- bullys look for those who avoid eye contact; act nervous FIX = do the opposite *act as if you're confident * stand tall, firm handshake --> builds confidence
Peplau's phase: Orientation
- defining the issue/problem ex. a patient is diabetic and doesn't know how to administer their own insulin. this is the problem
Types of Theory
1. Grand Theory 2. Middle-Range Theory 3. Practice Theory 4. Descriptive Theory 5. Prescriptive Theory
Bullying video: How do bully's choose their targets
1. New Nurses 2. Lack of self confidence 3. Passive communication skills
Bullying video: what are the steps to protecting yourself from bullying?
1. Recognize bullying behaviors 2. understanding how Bully's choose their targets
how is nursing both an art and science?
Art --> caring and nursing experience Science -->Evidence based practice (EBP/research)
Definitions: Theoretical/Conceptual
Conceptual = defining the theory or concept by a dictionary definition
A nurse ensures that each patient's room is clean; well ventilated; and free from clutter, excessive noise, and extremes in temperature. Which theorist's work is the nurse practicing in this example? A. Henderson B. Orem C. King D. Nightingale
D. Nightingale
The components of the nursing metaparadigm include: A. Person, health, environment, and theory. B. Health, theory, concepts, and environment. C. Nurses, physicians, health, and patient needs. D. Person, health, environment, and nursing.
D. Person, health, environment, and nursing.
Resource
Ex. the nurse helps the patient trying to learn how to administer their own insulin where to get supplies at home at a good budget
Who is the First Nursing Theorist?
Florence Nightingale
Peplau's Interpersonal Theory
Focus on interpersonal relations between nurse, patient, and patient's family. developed ways to interact with people Phases: 1. preorientation 2. orientation 3. working 4. resolution *Middle-range theory*
Health
Health is different for each patient
Bullying video: Bullying behaviors
Overt Behavior = you can see it (screaming) Covert behavior = more subtle (gossip, backstabbing, rolling eyes) *More destructive
Nursing Definitions
Person, Health, and environment all interconnected
Peplau's phase: Working
Teaching/ Therapeutic activity ex. the diabetic patient who doesn't know how to administer their own insulin will be taught by the nurse
Peplau's phase: Resolution
Termination of relationship - give final report - must make patient aware of when you're leaving (i have 12 hours left as your nurse) - set the next nurse coming to care for the patient up for success
The Nursing Process is ....
The Nursing Process is a systematic way to provide care (System Theory)
The Nursing Process is NOT ...
The Nursing Process is not a theory
Why is Nursing both Theory and Experiential
Theory = observation in class, learning from reading and interactive studies Experiential = clinical/simulation experience
what is the link between Theory and Knowledge development?
Theory builds knowledge (EBP/Research) this new knowledge (EBP/Research) is implemented into care practices
Theory generates....
Theory generates knowledge for clinical practice - theory supports EBP
What is nursing theory and why is it important?
Theory, research, and clinical practice all function together
What do theories do?
They explain, describe, predict, and prescribe Nursing Care
Surrogate
We do things for the patient until they can independently do it on their own Ex. the insulin patient --> we administer their insulin until they feel comfortable or know how to do it confidently by themselves
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs example
a patient is in pain (physicological need). You need to satisfy/meet the needs of the pain in order to move up in the hierarchy
paradigm
beliefs used to describe discipline
Orem's Self-Care Deficit Nursing Theory
believes that patients can improve their health by participating in self-care Ex. initially nurses help patients do things they cannot do by themselves. Then, when their health improves we let them do it by themselves
Leininger's Culture Care Theory
culture care theory - providing culturally specific care ex. Irish are stoic when experiencing pain ex. middle easterns are more vocal with pain
Counselor
discuss the problem ex. patient does not know how to administer insulin
Phenomenon
ex. caring ex. self-care ex. how a patient responds/copes to stress
what was Nightingales theory?
focused on environment - believed in using the environment to promote patient recovery and prevent complications
Shared Theory: Psychosocial Theory
focuses on: A. Physical needs B. Psychological needs C. Developmental needs D. Spiritual --> Jehovah witnesses refuse blood transfusions E. Sociocultural --> how culture affects health (ex. Irish people are stoic when it comes to pain) **These things make nursing wholistic
Theory Based Nursing Practice
goal of theory = to show how nursing is different from other disciplines