• Research Paper on:
    Jean Watson's Philosophy of Care

    Number of Pages: 4

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    This is a 4 page paper that provides an overview of Watson's "philosophy of care". The paper is arranged as speaker notes for a power point presentation. Bibliography lists 4 sources.

    Name of Research Paper File: KW60_KFhth005.doc

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    Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
    but also strive to engage with the patient on a human level, to provide an essential dimension of care that doctors and other professionals cannot do. For Watson, this aspect  of "care" is the defining characteristic of the nurse, and what makes nursing unique as an occupation within the health care field. Slide 2 One might now  further explore what Watsons conception of an advanced practice nurse looks like in the field. Watsons view is that nurses have a number of major roles to fulfill within the  context of a health care facility. Firstly, they establish caring relationships with patients by engaging with them on a humanistic level. Secondly, they are obliged to treat patients as holistic  beings; this means that while doctors and other professionals may be entirely considered with the physical health of the patient, nurses must also be concerned with the mental and emotional  wellbeing of patients. Additionally, this means providing a therapeutic function by treating the patient with positive regard and unconditional acceptance. Slide 3 This paragraph helps the  student explain Watsons concept of "caring moments". This role of the nurse is best encapsulated, within Watsons philosophy, in the activity of "caring moments". Caring moments are instances wherein a  nurse spends a certain amount of uninterrupted devoted time with a patient, for the purposes of engaging them in humanistic interaction that will ideally ease the discomfort inherent in the  patients being confined to a medical facility, whatever the reason. This simple personal interaction can have a transformative impact upon the worldview and mental station of the patient, determining whether  they tend to view their situation as hopeful or lessless, bright or dark, "threatening or secure" ("Overview", 2011). Slide 4 Typically, nursing standards have the tendency 

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