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Theory Presentation On Dorothea E

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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).

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