Slide 1: Theory Presentation on Dorothea E. Orem NURS 600 Maryville University BY: Whitney Rizzo Slide 2: Dorothea E. Orem Intro Born in 1914 in Baltimore, Maryland. Received a diploma in nursing in 1931. Bachelor’s in Science in 1939. While obtaining her Bachelor’s Degree in Nursing, Orem practiced at Providence Hospital, in Washington, DC. In 1945, Dorothea Orem, went on to obtain a Master’s Degree in Nursing where she then turned her focus away from practicing, and focused on research, and teaching. Dorothea Orem served as several different important positions and roles in her lifetime. These consisted of: teacher of biological sciences and nursing from 1939 to 1941, director of the Providence Hospital School of …show more content…
I have had patients tell me before: “I am schizophrenic, I will never be able to do this, the voices will never allow me too.” With the use of therapy and medication therapy, I then can construct a care plan for the patient and help the patient discern between reality and delusions. I also can help the patient realize the effects of medication compliance, and show that once compliant with medications the voices lessen. It is then, the patient can care for themselves again, and a lot of times are able to be discharged back to their own homes and not to personal care homes. Slide 6: Orem’s Contributions to Nursing Slide 7: Contributions to nursing The video to the right of this slide is an interview that was conducted with Dorothea Orem in 1988. In this video, she talks about how using the Self-Care Theory and model can help nurses not just focuses on the tasks they must complete but move toward the development of knowledge. (Orem, 1988). Slide 8: Definition of Self-Care In Orem’s book: Guides for developing curricula for the education of practical nurses, Orem defined self-care as being care that individuals provide daily. In this book Orem went on to state that the nurse is no longer needed when there is an observable change in the patient’s status and can now provide self-care. This is the basis of her Self Care Deficit Theory. (Orem, Taylor, & Renpenning, 2003).
Dorothea Orem was born July 15, 1914 in Maryland. Orem was a decorated nurse. She was awarded her nursing diploma from Providence Hospital in Washington, D.C. In 1939 she graduated with her Bachelor of Science in Nursing Education from Catholic University of America and in 1945 excelled again when she earned her Master of Science in Nursing. During her career she
Dorothea Orem’s theory accepts and describes the premise of self-directed personal care (Alligood et al., 2010). Orem’s theory also explains and predicts when the nurse will be needed once the illness has challenged an individual's functional capacity. The purpose of the theory is to focus on individual’s being able to care for themselves on their own, identify when nurses are needed to help individuals progress to better health. Besides, self-health care is put in place to acknowledge that nurses can aid individuals to get back to their functional baseline abilities on time. (Alligood et al.,
The theory focuses on the ability of a person to meet his or her own needs. Developed in the year 1970, Orem’s theory focused on the three various concepts, namely self-care, self-care deficit, and the nursing system. Self-care is a group of activities or processes that a person performs to maintain health, life, and wellbeing (Orem, 2001). For instance, self-care is being demonstrated when a chronic heart failure patient checks his or her weight daily, takes prescribes medications, and avoids salty foods. Self-care deficit happens when an individual is not able to provide effective self-care (Orem, 2011). Nurses are able to assist patients in this state by educating them with their disease condition and treatment compliance. A nursing
Three connecting theories developed by Dorothea Orem are the theory of self- care, the theory of self-care deficit and the theory of the nurse system (George, 2011). Self-care theory is offering an
Dorothea Orem is a notable figure in the nursing community, receiving several Honorary Doctorate degrees (McEwen & Wills, 2014). Orem was a member of the Board of Health in Indiana from 1949 until 1957 (McEwen & Wills, 2014). She received her first form of nursing education at the Providence Hospital School of Nursing in Washington, DC. She continued to educate her self by attaining her master’s degree in nursing from Catholic University in 1945. Orem experienced nursing from both practical and educational perspectives,
The nursing process does not merely treat the patient as a physical body, but rather treats the patient holistically. The central philosophy of Dorothea Orem's self-care deficit nursing theory "is that all patients want to care for themselves, and they are able to recover more quickly and holistically by performing their own self-care as much as they're able" (Dorothea Orem, 2012, Nursing Theory). However, although self-care may be the core of Orem's theory, the decision to engage in self-care must be facilitated by the patient's social and physical environment, of which the family can play a critical role in shaping.
The profession of nursing requires a capacity and joy for caring and healing others both mentally and physically. Nurses spend their careers caring for patients and their families often in the worst and most frightening periods of their lives. Nursing responsibilities can be lengthy, stressful and physically and emotionally demanding. The demands of the nursing profession coupled with the nursing shortage and longer work hours put even more stress on nurses. Despite these extreme demands, many nurses do not fully appreciate the importance self-care. Yet without proper care for themselves, nurses are not able to provide the best care for their patients.
These therapies have the possibility to help chronically mentally ill patients to find ways to achieve and maintain a harmony with their environment that would promote their physical and social health.
Self care is essential to the nursing profession because it is a reflection on the quality of health care nurses provide to their patients, it portrays an image to the patients on what’s necessary towards healthy living and can help nurses battle with stress and personal health. Self care can be expressed as taking care of ones self’s health and overall wellbeing. This can be shown through eating healthy, exercising daily, getting enough sleep and completing weekly activities to reduce stress. Improving your overall health can benefit nurses from overworking themselves and help minimize the affects certain stressors can have on them. By doing so, the overall atmosphere in the workplace and the quality of healthcare provided to the patients will be greatly improved.
Dumas graduated from Dillard University nursing school in 1951. Right after she graduated, she became an instructor there. In the year of 1961, she earned her master’s degree at Yale University. When she graduated from Yale, she became part of the school’s faculty. She eventually became the chair of psychiatric
Dorothea Orem is known as one of the foremost nursing theorists. She is credited with the development of a nursing grand theory, the self-care deficit nursing theory (SCDNT). The beginning of her career can be traced back to Washington, D.C. in the mid 1930’s. Though she was a Baltimore, Maryland native, Orem pursued her nursing education at Catholic University of America (CUA) in Washington, D.C., graduating with baccalaureate and Master’s degrees in 1939 and 1945 respectively. Following her education, Orem held many job positions across multiple nursing disciplines, including working as a private nurse, nurse educator, administrator, director, and private contractor (McEwen & Wills, 2011).
In essence, the role played by the nurse is to increase and facilitate the self-care abilities and level of the individual patient (Smith & Parker, 2015). As such, self-care is neither reflexive nor instinctive. Instead, it is either performed rationally or intentionally in response to an already known need. Based on this Orem's theory, rational response is learned through communication and interpersonal relations. Orem asserts that self-care agency can also be defined as the power to take action (Caruso, Cisar & Pipe, 2008). It is a complex capability developed to enable maturing adolescents and adults to recognize, identify, and understand various factors to be managed or controlled so as to decide about, develop, and perform realistic care measures. The capability discussed above is strongly dependent on culture-related values and lifelong experiences.
In 1891, at the age of 22, Lillian Wald decided to attend nursing school. She moved to New York and acquired her education at New York Hospital’s Training School
Orem focuses on nursing as a deliberate human action and notes that all individuals can benefit from nursing when they have health-derived or health-related limitations for engaging in self-care or the care of dependent others (Gunther, 2016). The nurse chooses deliberate actions from nursing systems to bring about desirable conditions in persons. The goal of nursing is to move a patient toward responsible self care or to meet existing healthcare needs of those who have health care deficits (Gunther, 2016). Orem expects people to be responsible for themselves and to seek help when they cannot maintain therapeutic self-care or dependent-care (Fawcett, 2003).
Dorothea Orem's self-care deficit theory was born while Dorothea Orem (1917-2007) was working in the Department of Health Education and Welfare (HEW) as a curriculum consultant. At this time in the history of the profession, nursing was just emerging as a unique academic discipline. Orem's theory was designed to answer the fundamental question: What is nursing? Orem defined nursing as a way of realizing every patient's desire to engage in self-care in a manner to "sustain life and health, recover from disease or injury and cope" with the consequences of major health events and daily life (El-Kader n.d.). Major assumptions of the theory include that "people should be self-reliant and responsible for their own care and others in their family needing care" (Dorothea Orem's self-care deficit theory, 2012, Current Nursing). Fundamentally, nursing and the nursing process is designed to enhance self-care and to address deficits in self-care.