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Dorothea Orem's Self-Care Deficit Theory

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Dorothea Orem was an impactful influence to the nursing field in part due to her Self-Care Deficit Theory. Orem was born in Baltimore, Maryland on July 15, 1914 and died on June 22, 2007 (Dorothea Orem Collection, 1975-1976). Orem practiced nursing in her earliest years at Providence Hospital in Washington, DC and St. John’s Hospital in Lowell, Massachusetts, and after receiving her major degrees from the Providence Hospital School of Nursing and the Catholic University of America, she focused more on teaching, administration, and research (Dorothea Orem Collection, 1975-1976). Orem developed the Self-Care Deficit Theory between 1959 and 2001 in order to improve the nursing quality in hospitals in her state (Self Care Deficit Theory, 2016). Orem spent almost her entire life to trying to implement this theory so it can be used for the present and future nursing generation. The Self-Care Deficit Theory focuses on nurses being responsible for the care they provided. The Self-Care Deficit Theory is one of the most used theories in the nursing field (Alligood, 2013). There are three related parts to the theory: theory of self-care, theory of self-care deficit, and theory of nursing system. The first part of the Self-Care Deficit Theory is the theory of self-care. The theory of self-care includes self-care, which includes practicing activities that a person performs on his or her own time to help maintain life, health, and wellness (Self

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