Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jean Watson’s Philosophy and Science of Caring addresses how nurses express care to their patients. Caring is central to nursing practice, and promotes health better than a simple medical cure. She believes that a holistic approach to health care is central to the practice of caring in nursing.
Watson’s 10 Carative Factors redefined as Caritas Processes: Guidelines for putting Love/Heart-Centered Caring practice into action: 1. Practicing loving-kindness and equanimity within context of caring consciousness. 2. Being authentically present and enabling, and sustaining the deep belief system and
Jean Watson’s “Philosophy and Theory of Transpersonal Caring” mainly concerns how nurses care for their patients and how that caring progresses into better plans to promote health and wellness, prevent illness and restore health.
A model of caring includes a call for both art and science; it offers a framework that embraces and intersects with art, science, humanities, spirituality, and new dimensions of mindbodyspirit medicine and nursing evolving openly as central to human phenomena of nursing practice.
Analyzing Watson’s theory of human caring, a study has referred to kindness, empathy, concern, and love for self and others as features of human caring and emphasized that all these features are influenced by childhood experiences, culture, beliefs, and art. 18 Another study also cited respect, compassion, and empathy when discussed on the ...
Watson’s model makes seven assumptions: Caring can be effectively demonstrated and practiced only interpersonally. Caring consists of carative factors that result in the satisfaction of certain human needs. Effective caring promotes health and individual or family growth.
The work has evolved to ‘Unitary Caring Science’ as a model for nursing science, based upon a unitary worldview/ related to the maturing unitary transformative paradigm for nursing’s phenomena, including energetic caring/healing practices.