APPLICATION OF
THEORY IN NURSING PROCESS
INTRODUCTION
- Theories
are a set of interrelated concepts that giSeptember 9, 2013nt) that is
explanatory & predictive in nature.
- Theories
are composed of concepts, definitions, models, propositions & are
based on assumptions.
- They
are derived through two principal methods; deductive reasoning and
inductive reasoning.
OBJECTIVES
- to
assess the patient condition by the various methods explained by the
nursing theory
- to
identify the needs of the patient
- to
demonstrate an effective communication and interaction with the patient.
- to
select a theory for the application according to the need of the patient
- to
apply the theory to solve the identified problems of the patient
- to
evaluate the extent to which the process was fruitful.
DEFINITION
- Nursing
theory is an organized and systematic articulation of a set of statements
related to questions in the discipline of nursing.
- "A
nursing theory is a set of concepts, definitions, relationships, and
assumptions or propositions derived from nursing models or from other
disciplines and project a purposive, systematic view of phenomena by
designing specific inter-relationships among concepts for the purposes of
describing, explaining, predicting, and /or prescribing."
CHARACTERISTICS OF A USEFUL THEORY [Robert T. Croyle (2005)]
A
useful theory makes assumptions about a behavior, health problem, target
population, or environment that are:
- Logical
- Consistent with everyday observations
- Similar to those used in previous successful programs
and
- Supported by past research in the same area or related
ideas.
IMPORTANCE OF NURSING THEORIES
- Nursing theory aims to describe, predict and explain
the phenomenon of nursing
- It should provide the foundations of nursing practice,
help to generate further knowledge and indicate in which direction nursing
should develop in the future. Theory is important because it helps us to
decide what we know and what we need to know
- It helps to distinguish what should form the basis of
practice by explicitly describing nursing. The benefits of having a
defined body of theory in nursing include better patient care, enhanced
professional status for nurses, improved communication between nurses, and
guidance for research and education
- The main exponent of nursing – caring – cannot be
measured, it is vital to have the theory to analyze and explain what
nurses do
- As medicine tries to make a move towards adopting a
more multidisciplinary approach to health care, nursing continues to
strive to establish a unique body of knowledge
- This can be seen as an attempt by the nursing
profession to maintain its professional boundaries
EVOLUTION OF NURSING THEORIES &
APPLICATION
- The
history of professional nursing begins with Florence nightingale.
- Later
in last century nursing began with a strong emphasis on practice.
- Following
that came the curriculum era which addressed the questions about what the
nursing students should study in order to achieve the required standard of
nursing.
- As
more and more nurses began to pursue higher degrees in nursing, there
emerged the research era.
- Later
graduate education and masters education was given much importance.
- The
development of the theory era was a natural outgrowth of the research era.
- With
an increased number of researches it became obvious that the research
without theory produced isolated information; however research and theory
produced the nursing sciences.
- Within
the contemporary phase there is an emphasis on theory use and theory based
nursing practice and lead to the continued development of the theories.
CHARACTERISTICS OF THEORIES
Theories
are
- Interrelating
concepts in such a way as to create a different way of looking at
a particular phenomenon.
- Logical
in nature.
- Generalizable.
- Bases
for hypotheses that can be tested.
- Increasing
the general body of knowledge within the discipline through the research
implemented to validate them.
- Used
by the practitioners to guide and improve their practice.
- Consistent
with other validated theories, laws, and principles but will leave open
unanswered questions that need to be investigated.
PURPOSES OF THEORY IN PRACTICE
- Assist nurses to describe, explain, and predict
everyday experiences.
- Serve to guide assessment, intervention, and evaluation
of nursing care.
- Provide a rationale for collecting reliable and valid
data about the health status of clients, which are essential for effective
decision making and implementation.
- Help to establish criteria to measure the quality of
nursing care
- Help build a common nursing terminology to use in
communicating with other health professionals. Ideas are developed and
words defined.
- Enhance autonomy (independence and self-governance) of
nursing by defining its own independent functions.
PURPOSES OF NURSING THEORIES
IN PRACTICE:
IN PRACTICE:
- Assist
nurses to describe, explain, and predict everyday experiences.
- Serve
to guide assessment, interventions, and evaluation of nursing care.
- Provide
a rationale for collecting reliable and valid data about the health status
of clients, which are essential for effective decision making
and implementation.
- Help
to describe criteria to measure the quality of nursing care.
- Help
build a common nursing terminology to use in communicating with other
health professionals.
- Ideas
are developed and words are defined.
- Enhance
autonomy (independence and self-governance) of nursing through
defining its own independent functions.
IN EDUCATION:
- Provide a general focus for curriculum design
- Guide curricular decision making.
IN RESEARCH:
- Offer a framework for generating knowledge and new
ideas.
- Assist in discovering knowledge gaps in the specific
field of study.
- Offer a systematic approach to identify questions for
study; select variables, interpret findings, and validate
nursing interventions.
- Approaches to developing nursing theory
- Borrowing conceptual frameworks from other disciplines.
- Inductively looking at nursing practice to discover
theories/concepts to explain phenomena.
- Deductively looking for the compatibility of a general
nursing theory with nursing practice.
- Questions from practicing Nurse about using Nursing
theory
PRACTICE
- Does this theory reflect nursing practice as I know it?
- Will it support what I believe to be excellent nursing
practice?
- Can this theory be considered in relation to a wide
range of nursing situation?
- Personal Interests, Abilities and Experiences
- What will it be like to think about nursing theory in
nursing practice?
- Will my work with nursing theory be worth the effort?
CONCLUSION
- If theory is expected to benefit practice, it must be
developed co- operatively with people who practice nursing.
- People who do research and develop theories think
differently about theory when they perceive the reality of practice.
- Theories do not provide the same type of procedural
guidelines for practice as do situation- specific principles and
procedures or rules.
- Procedural rules or principles help to standardize
nursing practice and can also be useful in achieving minimum goals of
quality of care.
- Theory is ought to improve the nursing practice.
- One of the most common ways theory has been organized
in practice is in the nursing process of analyzing assessment data.
REFERENCES
- Alligood M R, Tomey A M. Nursing Theory: Utilization
&Application .3rd ed. Missouri: Elsevier Mosby Publications; 2002.
- Tomey AM, Alligood. MR. Nursing theorists and their
work. (5th ed.). Mosby, Philadelphia, 2002
- George JB .Nursing Theories: The Base for
Professional Nursing Practice .5th ed. New Jersey :Prentice Hall;2002.
- Croyle RT. Theory at a Glance: Application to Health
Promotion and Health Behavior (Second Edition). U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, 2005. Available at
www.thecommunityguide.org.

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