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Tryson, P. A. (1963). An experiment of the effect of patients’ participation in planning the administration of a nursing procedu ...
CHAPTER 8 79 Dorothy Johnson PART ONE: Dorothy Johnson’s Behavioral System Model and Its Applications Introducing the Theorist I ...
Dorothy Johnson was born on August 21, 1919, in Savannah, Georgia. She received her associate of arts degree from Armstrong Juni ...
(e.g., rules and mores of home, school, country, and other cultural contexts) components that supply the sustenal imperatives (G ...
healthy lifestyle regimen to prevent problems in later years are all examples where accommodation not only promotes behavioral s ...
of behavioral responses that is developed and mod- ified through motivation, experience, and learning. Johnson identified seven ...
Each subsystem has functions that serve to meet the conceptual goal. Functional behaviors are those activities carried out to me ...
value placed on goal attainment, and in drive strength. With drives as the impetus for the behav- ior, goals can be identified a ...
ego, age and related developmental capacities, atti- tudes, and self-concept are general regulators that may be viewed as a clas ...
important point she made about the value system is that “given that the person has been provided with an adequate understanding ...
focuses efforts in nursing science on the expansion of knowledge about clients’ health problems and nursing therapeutics. Nurse ...
American Nursing Diagnosis Association) diag- noses, which demonstrated considerable overlap. Poster, Dee, and Randell (1997) fo ...
model could be used to develop a curriculum. The primary focus of the program would be the study of the person as a behavioral s ...
Table 8–2 Nursing Staffing Budget Unit: 2-South. ACTUAL NO. LEVELS OF NURSING INTERVENTIONS PATIENT —TOTAL COST— —COST PER PATIE ...
The Johnson Behavioral System Model cap- tures the richness and complexity of nursing. While the perspective presented here is e ...
Holaday, B. (1974). Achievement behavior in chronically ill chil- dren.Nursing Research, 23,25–30. Holaday, B. (1981). Maternal ...
94 CHAPTER 9 Myra Levine PART ONE: Myra Levine’s Conservation Model and Its Applications Introducing the Theorist Introducing th ...
man. He was often ill and frequently hospitalized with gastrointestinal problems. She thinks that this might have been why she h ...
a unified theory of health and disease, the mean- ing of the conservation principles, the hospital as environment, and patient-c ...
(Levine, 1988b). She and her colleagues began to focus on the importance of nursing research and taught perception, sleep, dista ...
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