Title: Bonnie M. Wivell, MS, RN, CNS
1Chapter 13 Nursing Theory The Basis for
Professional Nursing
- Bonnie M. Wivell, MS, RN, CNS
2Nursing Theory
- Latin a viewing Greek contemplating
- A body of knowledge shaped by how nurses see the
world - A group of related concepts, definitions
statements that propose a view of nursing
phenomena from which to describe, explain or
predict outcomes - Abstract ideas
3Why is Theory Important?
- Nursing is strengthened when knowledge is built
on sound theory - Criteria to be a profession distinct body of
knowledge as the basis for practice - Nursing must be viewed as a scholarly academic
discipline hat contributes to society - Ultimate goal is to support excellence in practice
4Theory Guides the Professional Nurse in.
- Organizing and analyzing patient data
- Understanding connections between pieces of data
- Discriminating between important and less
pertinent data - Making sound clinical judgments based on evidence
- Planning effective nursing interventions
- Predicting and evaluating outcomes of
interventions
5Definition of Terms
- Metaparadigm the major concepts or abstract
ideas of the discipline most important to
practice and research - Person
- Environment
- Health
- Nursing
- Philosophy a set of beliefs about the nature of
how things work and how the world should be
viewed begins to put together some or all
concepts of the metaparadigm
6Definition of Terms Contd.
- Conceptual Model or Framework a more specific
organization of nursing phenomena than
philosophies provide an organizational structure
that makes clearer connections between concepts - Propositions statements that describe linkages
between concepts and are more prescriptive they
propose an outcome that is testable in practice
and research
7Florence Nightingale
- Notes on Nursing What It Is and What It Is Not
(1969, originally published in 1859) - Her philosophy of health, illness, and the
nurses role in caring for patients - Focused on the relationship of patients to their
surroundings - Importance of observing the patient and recording
information - Importance of cleanliness
- Health and recovery from illness is related to
environment
8Virginia Henderson
- The Unique function of he nurse is to assist
the individual, sick or well, in the performance
of those activities contributing to health or its
recovery (or a peaceful death) that he would
perform unaided if he had the necessary strength,
will or knowledge. - Nurses role substitute for the patient, a
helper to the patient or a partner with the
patient - 14 basic needs of the patient (see Box 13-3 on
pg. 308)
9Jean Watson
- Studied at CU
- The Philosophy and Science of Caring (1979)
- Emphasized the caring aspects of nursing
- 10 Carative factors (see Box 13-4 on pg. 309)
these factors differentiate nursing from medicine
(curative) - Illness or disease equated with lack of harmony
within the mind, body, and soul - RN responsible for creating and maintaining an
environment supporting human caring while
recognizing and providing for patients primary
human requirements
10Watson Continued
- Proposed that nursing be concerned with spiritual
matters and the inner knowledge of nurse and
patient as they participate together in the
transpersonal caring process - Nurses share their genuine self
- Patients spiritual strength is recognized,
supported, encouraged - RN encourages openness to understanding of self
and others - Leads to trusting, accepting relationships where
feelings are shared and confidence is inspired
11Dorothea Orem
- Concept of self-care
- Ordinary people in contemporary society want to
be in control of their lives. - Patients baseline ability to provide adequate
self-care is assessed - Systems of care
- Wholly compensatory
- Partially compensatory
- Supportive-educative
12Imogene King
- A Theory for Nursing Systems, Concepts, Process
(1981) - Focused on persons, their interpersonal
relationships, and social contexts with three
interacting systems - Personal
- Interpersonal
- Social
- Emphasizes goal attainment and patients
involvement in setting goals (Goal Attainment
Model)
13Sister Callista Roy
- Introduction of Nursing An Adaptation Model
(second edition 1984) - Individual as a biopsychosocial adaptive system
- Nursing is a humanistic discipline that
emphasizes the persons adaptive and coping
abilities - The environment can be manipulated by the RN to
further patients adaptation
14Hildegard Peplau
- Interpersonal Relations in Nursing (1952 1988)
- Relationship between patient and nurse is the
focus of attention - Therapeutic interpersonal relationship
- Survival of the patient
- Patients understand his or her health problems
and learn from them as they develop new behavior
patterns - 6 roles of the nurse counselor, resource,
teacher, technical expert, surrogate, and leader
15Ida Orlando
- The Dynamic Nurse-Patient Relationship Function,
Process and Principles (1961) - Observation and confirmation of patients verbal
and non-verbal behavior, which identify patient
needs - Goal of the nurse is to determine and meet
patients immediate needs and improve their
situation by relieving distress or discomfort - Individualize care by attending to behavior
16Madeleine Leininger
- Theory of cultural care
- Founder of Transcultural nursing
- Patients viewed in the context of their cultures
- Nursing care should be culturally congruent
- Sunrise Model (Figure 13-2, pg. 317) guides the
assessment of cultural data for an understanding
of its influence on the patients life
17Theory-Based Education
- PhD a research degree that generates new,
discipline-specific knowledge - Masters use theoretical perspectives focused on
the patient for specific nursing outcomes base
practice on evidence from research experience - BSN introduced to research process the use of
theory to guide it - ADN find middle range theories useful as they
are specific to patient care
18Theory-Based Practice
- Occurs when nurses intentionally structure their
practice around a particular nursing theory and
use it to guide them in their care of the patient - Provides a systematic way of thinking about
nursing that is consistent and guides the
decision-making process - Challenges conventional views of patients,
illness, the health care delivery system, and
traditional nursing interventions
19Benefits
- Explain practice to others
- Passes on knowledge to students
- Contributes to professional autonomy
- Develops analytical skills, challenges thinking,
and clarifies your values and assumptions
20Theory-Based Research
- Great strides have been made in the last 25 years
in nursing research - Nursing research tests and refines the knowledge
base of nursing - Research findings enable nurses to improve the
quality of care and understand how evidence-based
nursing influences patient outcomes - Research is vital to the future of nursing and
theory is integral to research
21Chapter 14 The Health Care Delivery System
- Bonnie M. Wivell, MS, RN, CNS
22Health Care Delivery
- The four basic types of services provide by the
health care delivery system - Health Promotion remain healthy
- Illness prevention reduce risk factors
- Diagnosis treatment refined methods of
diagnosis allow for more effective treatment - Rehabilitation LTC restore function
independence disease management
23Health Care Agencies
- Government Contribute to health of all U.S.
citizens supported by taxes Federal, State,
Local - Voluntary (Private) Support via private
donations, government grants - Not-for-profit Profits used on behalf of agency
- For-profit Profits distributed to partners or
shareholders
24Level of Health Care Services
- Primary Care Services first entry into system,
emergency care, health maintenance, LTC, chronic
care, temporary health problems - Secondary Care prevent complications from
disease home health, ambulatory care, skilled
nursing agencies, and surgery centers disease
management via electronics - Tertiary Care acutely ill to LTC to rehab to
terminally ill interdisciplinary specialized
hospitals trauma centers, burn centers,
specialized peds centers LTC facilities that
offer skilled nursing, intermediate care and
supportive care rehab centers hospice - Subacute Care Inpatient care between hospital
and long-term care
25Organizational Structures of Health Care Agencies
- Board of Directors carry responsibility for
mission, quality of services, finances - Chief Executive Officer (CEO) overall daily
operation - Medical Staff physicians granted privileges
organized by service/dept. - Chief of staff work with CEO to make important
decisions about medical policy - Nursing Staff RNs, LPNs, NAs and clerical staff
organized according to units - Chief Nurse Executive (CNE) or Chief Nursing
Officer (CNO) today on Board of Directors,
oversee nursing care
26Nursing Organization Governance
- Nurses govern themselves though the organization
- Shared governance founded on the philosophy
that employees have both a right and a
responsibility to govern their own work and time
within a financially secure, patient-centered
system - Promotes decentralization and participation at
all levels of nursing
27Maintaining Quality
- Accreditation accrediting bodies approved by
CMS to improve pt. outcomes institution wide
initiatives - JCAHO (Joint Commission) not-for-profit that
serves as the nations predominant
standards-setting and accrediting body in health
care - HFOP (Healthcare Facilities Accreditation
Program) Standards met in all depts. - Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI)/Total
Quality Management (TQM) examine processes to
look for ways to improve services before mistakes
occur anticipate potential problems and prevent
their occurrence - Performance Improvement (PI) organizational
efforts to improve corporate performance focuses
efforts on increasing individual and group
competence and productivity -
28Health Care Disparities
- Defined as differences in the quality of health
care provided to different populations - Can be due to race, ethnicity, gender, age,
income, education, disability, sexual
orientation, and place of residence - Little progress has been made in narrowing
disparities - Provider bias possible contributing factor
29Health Care Team
- Physicians
- Physician Assistants
- Patient Care Technicians
- Dietitians
- Pharmacists
- Technologists
- Respiratory Therapists
- Social Workers
- Therapists
- Administrative Support Personnel admissions,
medical records, billing, etc.
30Nurses Role on Team
- Provider of Care direct hands on care
- Educator teaching pt., family, new staff,
community, etc. - Counselor emotional support problem solving
- Manager organizes care
- Researcher investigates how nursing
interventions impact patient outcomes - Collaborator works with patients, families
team on agreed patient outcomes - Patient Advocate stands up for patient rights
advocates for patients best interests at all
times
31Types of Nursing Care Delivery
- Functional Nursing focuses on functions/tasks
personnel work side by side each performing an
assigned task - Team Nursing RN is team leader, oversees,
assesses, documents LPN direct care, treatments,
procedures NA personal care - Primary Nursing one nurse accountable for
nursing care of patient during stay on unit
delegates care while off duty - Case Management Nursing oversees pt. care and
manages the delivery of services from entire
health care team throughout patients illness - Patient-centered Care contemporary model
focusing on patients rights to individualized
care
32Financing Health Care
- In 2007 the nations health care expenditures
reached 2.2 trillion and consumed 16.2 of the
gross domestic product - By 2018 health care costs are expected to reach
4.4 Trillion - Basic Economic Theory supply/demand Does it
relate to health care? - Free-Market economy consumption determined by an
individuals ability to pay - Price sensitivity in health care third party
payers (employer, insurance company, or
government) removed price sensitivity from the
concern of most health care consumers because
they pay only a portion of the actual costs - Additional influences cant delay care
33Economics of Nursing Care
- Nursing accounted for 20-28 of the costs of
hospitalizations in 1980s - To stay in business, hospitals must make at least
enough money to pay personnel, maintain buildings
and equipment, and pay suppliers - ANA overzealous cost-containment efforts have
led to lower quality hospital care - Aiken, Clark, Sloane et al, 2006 research links
nursing and quality of care increased patient
death rate with higher nursepatient ratios
34History of Health Care Finance
- Before 1945, 90 paid out of pocket or charity
care - Growth of Private Insurance ? tax exempt
- Rise of Public Insurance Programs (1965)
- Medicare
- Part A Hospital Insurance
- Part B Medical Insurance (20 co-pay,
deductible - Part C Managed care option
- Part D Prescription drug coverage
- Medicaid
- Federal government contributes 50-76.8
- Personal (out-of-pocket) payment
- Workers Compensation
35Forces Changing Health Care
- Managed Care attempts to control healthcare
costs health promotion not illness treatment - Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) health
care services provided for a predetermined fixed
fee - Capitation same amount paid to provider each
month regardless of whether services were
provided or how much the services cost - Gatekeeper PCP, responsible for referrals
- Preferred Provider Organization (PPO) contracts
with provider for discounted rate
36Forces Changing Health Care
- Point-of Service Organization (POS) choice of
service within network or outside network pay
higher - Physician Hospital Organization (PHO)
corporation formed by hospital/physician to
contract with managed care organization
37Nurses Role in Managed Care
- Advanced Practice Nurses ambulatory and
community settings - Case Manager
- Triage
- Utilization reviewers to determine most
appropriate and cost-efficient level of care
38Change in Consumers Expectations
- Became more educated and fight for rights to
health care through political reform and the
legal system - Proliferation of internet websites has
dramatically affected the knowledge and
expectations of consumers
39Health Cares Response
- Reengineering rethinking redesigning
- Patient-centered care patient at center of
activity and designing outcomes - Decentralization staff exercise own judgment
- Cross-functional teams people form all areas of
the organization who contribute to a particular
process - Multi-skilled workers single worker
cross-trained to do different tasks
40New Organizational Models
- Functional Model defines each major function of
the organization and establishes clear lines of
managerial authority - Service Line Model establishes management
responsibilities around specific types of
services wherever they occur in the hospital - Matrix Model complex with multiple authority and
support systems - Process Model organizes management of care
around phases in the process of healthcare
delivery - Regional Model complex health care systems that
grew from acquisitions organized by type of
service provider
41Continued Escalation of Health Care Costs
- Inflation
- New Technology and Drugs
- Increased Demand for Healthcare Services more
elderly uninsured - Fraud and Abuse of Payment Systems - 75 billion
of US annual health expenditures may be
attributable to fraud
42Cost Containment Measures
- Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services
contracts private insurance agencies to service
the Medicare program - Professional Review Organizations (PROs)
monitor the quality of care received - Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRGs) diagnoses with
similar resources consumptions and LOS patterns
into a single category 495 DRGs - Block Grants state given set amount of money
based on caseload, etc. - Continued Expansion of Managed Care largest
provider limits consumer choices but not
intended to reduce quality of care
43Health Care Finance Challenges
- Continuing Crisis Uninsured Americans
- Quality of Care
- Limits on Choice and Services
- Provider Restrictions Financial Incentives to
Limit Services - Cost of Prescription Drugs
- Malpractice Costs Impact of Access to Care
44Health Care Reform
- The US and South Africa are the only two
industrialized nations that do not provide
universal access to health care - System-wide health reform efforts were supported
by public opinion but failed to pass congress