Unit 1: Fundamentals of Nursing Concepts
The profession of nursing is
an art and a science
Knowledge
an awareness of the reality one acquires through learning or investigation
Prevention
anticipatory action taken to prevent the occurrence of an event or to minimize its effects after it has occured
Deontological:
-an action is right or wrong based on a rule, independent of its concequences
Wellness
-associated with health -an active state of being healthy by living a lifestyle that promotes good physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health
Stereotyping:
-assuming groups are alike
Florence Nightingale's contributions to nursing
-needs of patient -standards of hospital management -respectful occupation for women -health and illness -nursing separate and distinct from medicine
Integrity:
-the quality of being honest and having strong moral principles;
Utilitarian:
-the rightness or wrongness of an action depends on the consequences of the action
Factors affecting health and illness:
-Basic Human needs -physical -emotional -intellectual -environmental -sociocultural -spiritual
Nurses' Role in Healthcare Reform
-Cost containment -Improved access -Increased quality of services -Political action (nurses day on the hill)
Nursing Code of Ethics
-Framework (to make decisions) - professional expectations -Goals and values of profession -Protects patients
Influences on growth and development:
-Genetic heredity -Prenatal -Individual and caregiver factors -Environment -Nutrition -Health and illness -Culture
Political Action for Healthcare Reform
-Healthcare crisis is a societal problem -Nurse advocacy for our patient's well- being is an ethical obligation -Nurses need to use their political muscle & credibility
Improve care of patients:
-Improve quality -Improve cost effectiveness -Increased safety
Caring
-Nursing actions that demonstrate an attitude of positive regard, respect, empathy and integrity when providing relationship centered care.
Nurse Practice Act
-Protects the public -Lists violations -Excludes untrained or unlicensed people
Trends In Health Care Delivery
-Self-care focus -Knowledgeable consumers -Cost containment -Fragmentation of care -Aging & diversity of America -Nursing shortage
Professionalism
-The nursing student embraces personal and professional responsibility for maintaining current knowledge, skills and attitudes based on evidence, integrity clinical competence and excellence to provide quality care in a changing health care environment.
Collaboration
-The partnership with the individual, family and health care team that utilizes health information/informatics to achieve safe, quality outcomes in a changing healthcare environment.
Critical thinking
-The student utilizes the nursing process as a clinical decision making tool to promote health for individuals within a family and community context.
Nursing as a profession
-uses an organized body of knowledge -generated from research and theory (provides rational for our nursing intervention actions)
Psychoanalytical theory of Growth and Development (Freud)
-Theory emphasizes the effect of instinctual human drives on behavior -4 major components: -5 stages: -If no resolution in one stage, fixation follows with arrested development -Ego is defense mechanism
Adaptation Theory
-adaptation: adjustment of living matter to other living things and to environmental conditions -continual process that effects change and involves interaction and response -Human adaptation has 3 levels: internal, social, and physical
Values:
- belief about the worth of something -formed over a lifetime -environment -family -culture
Cognitive Theory of Growth and Development (Piaget)
-4 stages of cognitive development from birth to adolescent -Framework for how children learn rules -Each stage transforms and supersedes the one before -Stages are universal (affects all cultures, all people)
Psychosocial Theory (Erikson)
-8 stages : infancy to late adulthood -Each stage has major crisis -Lack of resolution prevents aliening to develop fully -Never to late for resolution of any stage crisis
Human dignity:
-An individual or group's sense of self-respect and self-worth, physical and psychological integrity and empowerment
Healthy People 2020 goals:
-attain high-quality, longer lives free of preventable disease, disability, injury, and premature death -achieve health equity, eliminate disparities, and improve the health of all groups -create social and physical environments that promote good health for all -promote quality of life, healthy development, and healthy behaviors across all live stages
Normal physiological changes in older adults:
-balance declines -decreased ability to maintain homeostasis -integument (skin declines) -senses decline
Race:
-based on specific physical charectoristics
Types of Ethics
-bioethics -clinical -nursing
Physiological
-body function
Patricia Benner
-caring is a common of persons situated in a state of being that is essential to nursing -a systematic description of stages of nursing practice, novice, advanced, beginner, and expert
Madeline Leininger
-caring is the central theme of nursing care knowledge and practice -provides the foundation of transcultural nursing care. caring improves human conditions and life processes
Authoritative knowledge:
-comes from experts and is accepted as truth based on the persons' perceived expertice
Nursing Theory
-composed of a group of concepts that describe a pattern of reality -statement that explains or characterizes a process, occurrence, or an event that is based on observed facts -arrange a group of related statements or concepts that give meaning to a series of events
Nursing Theories are developed to:
-describe -explain -predict -control *the desired outcomes of nursing care
Maslow
-developed the theory of basic human needs -physical and psychological needs considered essential to human life
Secondary:
-early detection -health maintenance -early intervention KEY: screenings
Broader study of people and nursing to enhance:
-education -policy developments -ethics -history
Psychosocial
-emotional, reactions with environment, other humans
Martha Rogers
-emphasis on science and art of nursing, with unitary human being central to the discipline of nursing -nursing interventions are directed towards repatterining human environment fields or assisting in mobilizing inner resources
Principles of growth and development
-growth and development are orderly and sequential as well as continuous and complex -growth and development follow regular and predictable trends -growth and development are both differentiated and integrated -different aspects of growth and development occur at different stages -happens on an individual basis
Primary:
-health promotion -illness prevention KEY: teaching
Role of Nurse for elderly
-health restoration -health maintenance -health promotion
Leading health problems
-heart and lung conditions -arthritis -diabetes -HIV
Health Promotion Model
-how people interact with their environment as they pursue health
Sister Callista Roy
-humans are biopsychosocial being existing within an environment. needs are created within interrelated adaptive modes: physiological self-concept, role function, and interdependence -nursing inventions are required when individuals demonstrate ineffective adaptive responses
Growth
-increase in body size or changes in body cell structure, function, and complexity
Health
-individually defined -integrates all the human dimensions -holistic care is important
Human needs
-influenced and responsive to both internal and external enviornments -holistic nursing care provides individualized and health-orientated care
Cognitive
-intelligence, thinking
Health promotion:
-is the behavior of a person who is motivated by a personal desire to increase well-being and health potential
Social justice:
-justice in terms of the distribution of wealth, opportunities, and privileges within a society
Scientific knowledge:
-knowledge obtained through the scientific method (research)
Nurses:
-largest employee group in healthcare -part of health care team -practice guided by the nursing process
Evidence based research
-nursing care provided that is supported by reliable research based evidence -its use mandates critical analysis and extensive systematic reviews of research articles and findings to improve nursing interventions and actions
Watson
-nursing is concerned with promoting and restoring health, preventing illness and caring for the sick -holistic care: promote humanism, health, and quality of living -caring is universal and is practiced through interpersonal relationships
Hildegard Peplau
-nursing is therapeutic, interpersonal and goal orientated -nursing interventions are directed towards the developing the patient's personality for a productive personal and community living
Inductive reasoning
-one builds from specific ideas or actions to come to a conclusion about general ideas -SMALL ideas come together to form a BIG picture
Deductive reasoning
-one examines a general idea then considers specific actions or ideas -BIG idea broken down into small ones
Health is subjective
-one may be diagnosed with a clinical disease but still consider themselves to be a healthy individual
Cultural Assimilation:
-ones values are replaced by the values of the dominant culture
Development
-orderly pattern of change in structure, thoughts, feelings or behaviors resulting from maturation, experiences and learning
Developmental Thoery
-outlines the process of growth and development of humans as orderly and predictable, beginning with conception and ending with death -defined stages; the process and behaviors of an individual within each stage are unique
Traditional knowledge:
-part of nursing practice that has been passed down from generation to generation -"we've always done it this way"
Health Belief Model
-perceived susceptibility to disease -perceived seriousness of a disease -perceived benefits of action
Restoring health
-performing assessments that detect an illness -referring questions and abnormal findings to other health care providers -providing direct care to the person who is ill -collaborating with other health care providers -assisting with the rehab process -working with mental health and chemical dependency
Chronic illness
-permanent change -slow onset -requires education and support for rehab
Levels of Prevention
-primary -secondary -tertiary
Value clarification:
-process of understanding your own values and value system
5 Core Integrating Concepts
-professionalism -critical thinking -caring -collaboration -therapeutic nursing interventions
Goals of Nursing
-promote health -prevent illness -restore healthy living -facilitate coping with disability or death
Acute illness
-rapid onset of symptoms and lasts only a relatively short time
Preventing Ilness
-reduce risk for illness -promote good health habits -maintain optimal functioning
Spiritual
-religious, sense of correctness with inner self
Illness
-response of the person to a pathological problem where level of functioning is changed -individually defined
Tertiary
-restoration -care of dying
Evidence based practice:
-review and critique research reports -identify level and strength of the evidence -make specific recommendation for the practice (validate/change)
Dorothea Orem
-self-care is a human need, self-care deficits require nursing action -nursing is a human service, and nurses design interventions to provide or manage self-care actions for sustaining health or recovering from illness or injury
Autonomy:
-self-determination; being independent and self governing
Ethnicity:
-sense of identification, sharing of unique cultural and social beliefs
Moral
-sense of right and wrong
Culture:
-shared system of beliefs and behavioral expectations -social structure for daily living -defines how we treat others/our family systems
Ethics
-systematic inquiry into principles of right and wrong conduct of virtue and vice and of good and evil as they relate to conduct
Healthy people 2020
-the ability of patients to obtain, process, and understand the basic information needed to make appropriate decisions about their health -establishes health promotion guidelines for the nation
Altruism:
-the belief in or practice of disinterested and selfless concern for the well-being of others.
Culture Shock:
-the feelings a person expierences when placed in a different culture
General Systems Theory
-whole is greater than the sum of its parts -systems are interrelated and changing one thing in a subsystem can change the entirety of a system -boundaries separate systems from each other and their environments -systems communicate through means of inputs and outputs -closed and open systems -to survive open systems maintain balance through feedback
3 types of knowledge
1. Traditional 2. Authoritative 3. Scientific
Stages of Illness
1. experiencing symptoms 2. assuming sick role 3. assuming a dependent role 4. achieving recovery and rehabilitation
ANA Definition of Nursing
Nursing is the diagnosis and treatment of human responses to actual or potential health problems
Ethnocentrism:
belief that one's ideas, beliefs, and practices are best or superior
Risk factor:
increased chances for illness or injury
Disease
pathologic change in the structure or function of the body or mind
Health
state of optimal functioning or well being