Introduction
The purpose of this paper was to facilitate personal reflection and analysis of my current approach to nursing. First to identify how I define each of the nursing metaparadigms Person, Environment, Health and Nursing. Next to explain why I feel the way I do about each concept and lastly to analyze which paradigm my thinking represents. A major focus being on defining the relationships between the four metaparadigms identified by Fawcett. In (Kozier et al, 2014) its stated that “philosophical thinking provides the foundation for the development and critical analysis of nursing knowledge. Nursing knowledge is organized and communicated by using concepts, models, frameworks and theories (p. 62).” Within the Framework for the
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Perhaps one patient chooses medical aid in dying and one patient chooses to attempt chemotherapy and radiation regardless of a terminal prognosis. Perhaps the thought of dying scares them or their beliefs contradict the concept of medically assisted suicide. The reason I described the person as a combination of body, mind and spirit is based on my example from my professional experience and the definition the World health organization gives for health, "a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity." This indicates that the person is a compilation of physical, mental and social aspects and cannot be looked at only in the physical. We know the body is your physical connection, it’s how people experience the world through their senses and the organization and translation of stimuli (Kozier et al, 2014). Your mind would be your thoughts. What you know about the world and who you are within it as you perceive it based on your lived experiences. Your spirit represents your emotions. What motivates and drives you and helps frame the kind of person you are (Kozier et al, 2014). This description of a person can also be applied to a family, community or larger population and correlates the overall wholeness of the “person” within the nursing paradigm.
Environment
The environment metaparadigm would be considered everything the person is exposed to and how they perceive their current
In order to explore my philosophy it is important that I be aware of how I would define nursing. “Definitions of nursing, like nursing itself, are dynamic; nursing is constantly evolving to meet new needs and take account of new knowledge.”(Clark, 2003, add p. # for direct quote)
I define my philosophy of nursing within the three nursing domains of person, health, and environment. My goal is to communicate the importance of nursing as a knowledge-based career, depending not only on the nurse fulfilling her role but also on the patient’s compliance. A patient must learn to provide self-care at home in the same capacity as the nurse would provide care in the clinical setting. I discuss various subjects within nursing. I explain why I want to be a nurse, what I believe a nurse’s role is, the different domains of nursing, and where I believe nursing will be in the future. My philosophy demonstrates the interdependence of the nursing domains. You cannot fully evaluate a person without evaluating their health,
Critical reflection is vital to develop evidence based practice for safe and quality approaches to professional nursing practice. Nursing professionals should critically reflect on events to identify what health professionals might do to improve their practice and reduce the risk of a similar error. Reflective practice can help to learn from their mistakes, be empowered and most importantly to deliver best possible care to patient as nurses must work closely with their patients to develop a therapeutic relationship. Critical reflection is a valuable skill to ensure patient centred care. This practice promotes personal development by enhancing students’ self-awareness, their sense of community, and their sense of their own capacities for
Nursing is fast pace and it is important to look back and reflect on what you have done in the past year. To learn and in order to develop more skills. Nursing school is the same. Self reflections are important in order to help better understand the strengths or weakness’s one may have. It helps you learn and see how the idea’s you learnt in theory come to play in clinical or in everyday situations. In this paper I will discuss health and health promotion and what it means to me as a student nurse. How it impacts everyday life. Next, I will discuss the knowledge I have gained from BNURS 288 and how it will help me become a better nurse in the future. Everything we learn today is to help become better individuals and better nurses. I will also discuss how health promotion works in a community setting through the bulletin boards we are doing. Lastly, I will reflect on how everything I have learnt thus far shapes me as an individual and the roles I play during clinical in BNURS 289. Reflecting on the past semester and this is class is a great way to review and remember everything we have done as well as it helps you refresh key idea’s you may have forgotten or were not to sure on. It helps you learn and grow.
“Philosophies of nursing are statements of beliefs about nursing and expressions of values in nursing that are used as bases for thinking and acting. Most philosophies are built on a foundation of beliefs about people, environment, health, and nursing” (Chitty & Black, p. 298). By using person, environment, health, and nursing as a guideline to achieve the ultimate goals of nursing; I will discuss my personal philosophy and how these factors are used in nursing.
The development of a philosophy related to the profession of nursing is important in that it provides a framework for the nurse to base his/her work on. Philosophy is defined by Merriam-Webster as “a search for a general understanding of values and reality by chiefly speculative rather than observational means”. In other words, philosophies are based on beliefs and assumptions with an overall goal of obtaining an objective which states the nurse’s purpose in the profession. In my undergraduate nursing program I was exposed to multiple nursing concepts that guided my practice. Coupled with my ten years of experience in the nursing field, I was enabled to formulate my own framework or guide to nursing. The paradigm which resonates with me the most is the interactive-integrative perspective as it views practice “as having multiple, interrelated parts in relation to a specific context.” (Newman, Sime, & Corcoran-Perry, 1991, p.38). My framework includes three main components: the client, the professional nurse, and the nurse-client relationship.
The nursing metaparadigm concepts described by Fawcett (as cited in McEwen & Willis, 2011), are a primary phenomena of interest to a discipline, which identifies globally by ways in which, nursing can deal with those phenomena in a distinctive and applicable manner. The functional aspects of the meta-paradigm according to Kim (as cited in McEwen & Willis, 2011), involve a combination of intellectual and
The purpose of this paper is to explore the personal nursing philosophy I intend to use in my career as a nurse and to explore my values and beliefs about the four metaparadigms – the patient, the nursing practice, their health and the environment, and the discipline of nursing in addition to discussing the nursing concepts relevant to my practice as a nurse practitioner. This paper also discusses the nurse of the future and the Synergy model definitions of the four metaparadigms and how they fit into my personal philosophy.
The purpose of this assignment is to enable the student, myself, to rediscover his or her personal philosophy of nursing as it exists upon the completion of the baccalaureate nursing program. Throughout the semesters, the view I had on what nursing meant to me has grown deeper, but one thing has stayed the same; my philosophy. In my philosophy project from the very first semester, I stated that nursing involves many different parts that all come together to make one great final end product, just like cookies. I compared nursing parts and all the different items nurses bring into the field, to being similar to the ingredients used to make cookies. I still believe that nursing is comprised of many different parts that all come together in order to give the best patient care possible. The personal philosophy paper now is an extension on that first semester’s assignment, to show the growth and development I have had while in this nursing program. It will explore what my personal definition of nursing is, the purpose of nursing, what assumptions in nursing there are, and will conclude with the principles of nursing.
The following essay is a reflective account on an event that I, a student nurse encountered whilst on my second clinical placement in my first year of study. The event took place in a Fountain Nursing Home in Granite City. I have chosen to give thought to the event described in this essay as I feel that it highlights the need for nurses to have effective communication skills especially when treating patients that are suffering with a mental illness. Upon arriving to the Nursing home for the second time on Thursday November 14,2013; assigned the same patient as before. On meeting my patient the first thing I noticed myself doing without even thinking about it was giving her a visual inspection. Before nursing school I never really looked at
The purpose of this paper is to discuss my personal beliefs pertaining to the profession of nursing. As well I will discuss the (4) metaparadigms in nursing which are known as; human beings, environment, health, and nursing, and my personal beliefs on these concepts and how they have similarities to the nursing philosophy of a nursing theorist.
The objective of this reflection is to explore and reflect upon a situation from a clinical placement on an orthopedic unit. The incident showed that I did not provide safe, timely and competent care for my patient when the oxygen saturation was low. Furthermore, this reflection will include a description of the incident, and I will conclude with explaining what I have learned from the experience and how it will change my future actions.
Masters (2012) described that philosophies “set forth the general meaning of nursing and nursing phenomena through reasoning and the logical presentation of ideas” (p. 49). The mind-map provided presents the personal philosophy of this author’s nursing practice in relation to the four concepts of the metaparadigm of nursing. The compatibility of this author’s personal philosophy with existing
Throughout the history of nursing, there have been many nursing theorists who have each made significant contributions towards the shaping of nursing knowledge. Each of these theorists have differing perspectives and interpretations of how each domain of the nursing metaparadigm fit into their respective theories. The four domains of the nursing metaparadigm are: person, environment, health and illness, and nursing. The purpose of this reflection is to provide an overview of the domains related to the metaparadigm of nursing as well as to introduce this author’s perspective on their developing personal philosophy of nursing. In this paper, the author will take a closer look at each of these areas, how they are individually defined, and how they each fit into the nursing metaparadigm as a whole. At the conclusion of this overview, readers will be introduced to how these theorists and their perspectives have enabled this author to begin to create their own philosophy of nursing.
I absolutely enjoyed my clinical rotation day today in ICU! I observed an outstanding RN, remarkable, really! She had two patients and was lead nurse for the shift. I was so proud to observe, the wise decisions she made, her education level was easily identifiable, she is paid for her brain, not her sweat, although, there was much sweat.