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bodily care is to comfort the patient. Through this comforting, the person of the patient, as well as his or her body, responds ...
The nurse who knows self by the same token can love and trust the patient enough to work withhim The nurse who knows self by the ...
ward secretaries. Morning and evening shifts were staffed at the same ratio. Night-shift staffing was less; however, Hall (1965) ...
nurses at the Loeb Center. Before hiring, the phi- losophy of nursing and the concept of professional practice were discussed wi ...
Implications for Nursing Research In addition to case study research by nurses who worked at Loeb, an 18-month follow-up study o ...
being of elders. She would challenge the widely held belief that provision of care to this population consists only of bed and b ...
Wiggins, L. R. (1980). Lydia Hall’s place in the development of nursing theory.Image, 12,10–12. Bibliography Hall, L. E. (1955). ...
CHAPTER 11 125 PART ONE: Josephine Paterson and Loretta Zderad’s Humanistic Nursing Theory and Its Applications Susan Kleiman In ...
Introducing the Theorists Dr. Josephine Paterson is originally from the East Coast where she attended a diploma school of nursin ...
the possibility for each to “become” in concert with the other. According to Josephine Paterson and Loretta Zderad, in nursing, ...
128 SECTION II Evolution of Nursing Theory: Essential Influences nu rtu ring towar dwell-beingan dm ore be ing Gestalt Incarna ...
CHAPTER 11 Josephine Paterson and Loretta Zderad’s Humanistic Nursing Theory and Its Applications 129 Nursing is Transactional C ...
can be verified by examining the phenomenon itself. Dr. Paterson and Dr. Zderad describe five phases to their phenomenological s ...
process angular view is called upon to help make sense of and give meaning to the phenomena being studied. By identifying our an ...
the time when the nurse mulls over, analyzes, sorts out, compares, contrasts, relates, interprets, gives a name to, and categori ...
p. 81) in a process that corrects and expands her own angular view. This is the pattern of the dialectic process, which is refle ...
innate in applying the humanistic nursing theory to a clinical setting. Dr. Paterson (1977, p. 13) shared her experiences with a ...
PRACTICE: CLINICAL SUPERVISION The humanistic nursing approach is useful in clin- ical supervision. In the process of supervisio ...
community of nurses allows each nurse and the community to become more. I became aware of a common call being issued forth by nu ...
individually formulated their own knowledge base and expanded their angular view. As Dr. Paterson and Dr. Zderad proposed, “each ...
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