CHAPTER
12
141
Dorothea E. Orem
PART ONE: Dorothea
E. Orem’s Self-Care
Deficit Nursing Theory
Introducing the Theorist
Views of Human Beings Specific to Nursing
Summary
References
She argues that nursing is distinguished from other
human services and other forms of care by the way
in which it focuses on human beings. In the 1950s,
she had the foresight to recognize the need to iden-
tify the proper focus of nursing and to clarify the
domain and boundaries of nursing as a field of
practice in order to enhance nursing’s disciplinary
evolution. She began her work by seeking an an-
swer to the question of what conditions exist in
people when judgments are made about their need
for nursing care. She concluded that the human
condition associated with the need for nursing is
the existence of a health-related limitation in the
ability of persons to provide for self the amount
Introducing the Theorist
Dorothea E. Orem is described as a pioneer in the
development of distinctive nursing knowledge
(Fawcett, 2000, p. 224). Orem contends that the
term “care” describes nursing in a most general way,
but does not describe nursing in a way that distin-
guishes it from other forms of care (Orem, 1985).
Nursing is distinguished from other human
services and other forms of care by the
way in which it focuses on human beings.
Dorothea E. Orem