Jean Watson’s Theory of Human Caring (Caritas) is now used in approximately 300 health care institutions in the United States and other institutions worldwide. This is the first international compendium of Caritas research, presenting the findings of 41 studies from 7 countries. The book examines similarities and differences in the ways in which each country applies Watson’s Theory and documents the outcomes of these interventions. It addresses relationships between nurses and patients, nurses and their colleagues, self-care, and how Caritas is used to resolve outcome issues system-wide.
The book discusses at length eight different Caring Factor surveys, primary research tools for those using the Caritas process, which identify constructs that either support or impede caring in multiple settings. The first section focuses on the theoretical underpinnings of Caritas and presents seven adaptations of the Caring Factor Survey. Section II addresses measurements and methods for facilitating a caring relationship between nurse and patient. Measurements and interventions to facilitate Caritas in a variety of settings is the focus of Section III, and the final sections address the international measurement and international comparisons of Caritas. The volume will be an important resource for nurse leaders, educators, administrators in academia including unit managers, and for hospitals with or seeking Magnet status. The book serves as a complement to Watson’s Assessing and Measuring Caring in Nursing and Health Care and Creating a Caring Science Curriculum: An Emancipatory Pedagogy for Nursing.
A co-publication with the Watson Caring Institute, this volume:- Presents cutting-edge tools derived from the Caring Factor Survey for measuring caring in multiple contexts
- Discusses similarities and differences in caring contexts across nations
- Documents outcomes of Caritas in varied settings in the United States and internationally
- Addresses nurse-patient and nurse-colleague relationships, self-care, and resolution of system-wide outcome issues
Tabela de Conteúdo
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Contributors
Foreword by Daniel J. Pesut
Preface
Acknowledgments
SECTION I: THEORETICAL BACKGROUND OF CARITAS
1.Concepts of Caring as Construct of Caritas Hierarchy in Nursing Knowledge: Conceptual-Theoretical-Empirical (CTE)
2.Caring Science as Metaparadigm
3.The Caritas Process of Hope as a Midrange Theory
4.Caring Factor Survey and Adaptations
SECTION II: MEASUREMENT AND METHODS FOR CONNECTING NURSE TO PATIENT
5.Measuring Caring in Primary Nursing
6.Patient and Nurse Perception of the Individual Caring Relationship
7.Profile of a Nurse Effective in Caring
8.Making the ”Quantum Leap”: Biochemical Markers of Human Caring Science
SECTION III: MEASUREMENT AND INTERVENTIONS TO FACILITATE CARITAS
9.Measurement of Caring in a Relationship-Based Care Model of Nursing
10.Integrating Human Caring Science Into a Professional Nursing Practice Model11.Impact of Intentional Caring Behaviors on Nurses’ Perceptions of Caring in the Workplace, Nurses’ Intent to Stay, and Patients’ Perceptions of Being Cared For
12.Caring at the Core: Maximizing the Likelihood That a Caring Moment Will Occur
13.”Partners in Care”: Patient and Staff Responses to a New Model of Care Delivery
14.The Caring Moment and Participative Action Research (PAR) in Outcomes Management
15.Therapeutic Music Pilot in the Context of Human Caring Theory
16.Caritas Heart Math TM in the Emergency Department Setting: The Impact of Self-Care on Practitioners
SECTION IV: INTERNATIONAL MEASUREMENT OF CARITAS: EXEMPLARS FROM THE FIELD
17.First Measurement of Caritas in Italy
18.Utilization of the Clinical Caritas Process in a Selected Tertiary Hospital in the Philippines
19.Reflection as a Process to Understand Caring Behaviors During Implementation of Relationship-Based Care in a Community Health Service in England
20.A Chinese Cultural Perspective of Nursing Care in Macao, China
SECTION V: INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON OF CARITAS
21.Comparison of Caritas in Health Care Facilities in Macao, China, the Philippines, and the United States as Perceived by Patients
22.Nurses’ Caring for Self, a Four Country Descriptive Study (England, Israel, New Zealand, and the United States)
APPENDICES: EXEMPLARS OF CARITAS FROM SPECIFIC POPULATIONS
A.The Holistic Perspective of Nursing: The Caring Factor Survey in a Hospice in Italy
B.Caring Behaviors of Community Health Nurses in a Barangay Health Center in Makati City, the Philippines
C.Extent of Utilization of the Clinical Caritas Process as Perceived by Nurses in the Philippines
D.The Presence of Caring Among Long-Term Care Nurses in the United States
E.Caring Attitudes of Nurses From the United States Toward Medical-Surgical Patients Who Have a Diagnosis of Drug Addition
F.Caring for Patients With Breast Cancer in the Philippines
G.A U.S. Study of Nurses’ Self-Care and Compassion Fatigue Using Watson’s Concepts of Caritas
H.Caring in the Context of Curing: What are Patients’ Perceptions of Nurse Caring When Receiving ECT in the PACU?
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Sobre o autor
Jean Watson, Ph D, RN, AHN-BC, FAAN, is distinguished professor emerita and dean emerita of the School of Nursing at the University of Colorado. She is the founder of the Center for Human Caring in Colorado, a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing, and a past president of the National League for Nursing. Dr. Watson is a widely published author and recipient of several awards and honors, including an international Kellogg Fellowship in Australia, a Fulbright Research Award in Sweden, and five honorary doctoral degrees, including Honorary International Doctor of Science awards from Goteborg University, Sweden, and Luton University, London. Dr. Watson’s caring philosophy is used to guide new models of caring and healing practices in diverse settings worldwide. At the University of Colorado, Dr. Watson holds the title of distinguished professor of nursing, the highest honor accorded its faculty for scholarly work.