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The Caring Occasion. Watson Says… “ ”  A poignant human- to human interaction  “manifests within a healing consciousness” (pg. 411)  a Metaphysical.

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Presentation on theme: "The Caring Occasion. Watson Says… “ ”  A poignant human- to human interaction  “manifests within a healing consciousness” (pg. 411)  a Metaphysical."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Caring Occasion

2 Watson Says… “ ”  A poignant human- to human interaction  “manifests within a healing consciousness” (pg. 411)  a Metaphysical Experience (Watson’s use of energy fields and transcendence) (George, 2002) ( www.shiftinaction.com, 2005)www.shiftinaction.com

3 Associated Concepts Healing ConsciousnessTranspersonal Caring  Obtaining a certain method of thinking in the dynamics of transpersonal caring  The state of the nurse’s consciousness affects the energy fields of others  “The caring-healing process is connected with the other human(s) and the higher energy of the universe…” (Watson, 2008)  The deep connected quality of human-to- human interaction  The sharing of oneself (by both patient and nurse) in the healing process  Healing modalities that are rooted in intentionality and promote human dignity… (George, 2002)

4 Associated Concepts The Ten Carative FactorsThe Postmodern Mindset  1. Practice kindness, 2. presence, 3. transpersonal self, 4. helping-trusting function, 5. feeling expression (+ & -), 6.creative self, 7. teaching- learning function, 8. healing environment, 9. intentional care essentials, 10. existential dimension of life and death (Sitzman & Eischelberger, 2004)  Multiple truths  Physical and nonphysical phenomena  Relativity of time and space  Emerging artistry, spirit- metaphysical, holographic, etc. (George, 2002)

5 How do we facilitate the “ Caring Occasion ”?  The nurse must bring to the table their unique life histories (Sitzman & Eischelberger, 2004).  Transpersonal caring behaviours, in accordance with the 10 Carative Factors  “Emotional catharsis and ‘intersubjective flow’” (Mullaney, 2000).

6 Applying Theory to Practice

7 The Watsonian Nurse

8 Strengths

9 Limitations

10 Proposal (Google Images, 2008).

11 References Bernick, L. (2004). Caring for older adults: Practice guided by Watson’s caring-healing model. Nursing Science Quarterly, 17(2), 128-134. Retrieved October 25, 2008 from CINAHL database. George, J. (2002). Nursing theories: The base for professional nursing practice. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. Mullaney, J. (2000). The lived experience of using Watson’s actual caring occasion to treat depressed women. Journal of Holistic Nursing, 18 (2), 129-142. Sitzman, K. and Eischelberger, L.W. (2004). Understanding the work of nurse theorists: A creative beginning. Detroit, MI: Jones and Bartlett Publishers. Smith, M. (2004) Review of research related to Watson’s theory of caring. Nursing Science Quarterly, 17(1), 13-25. Retrieved October 25, 2008 from CINAHL database. Watson, J. (1999). Nursing: Human science and human care: A theory of nursing. Boston, MA: Jones and Bartlett Publishers. Watson, J. (2008). The Watson Caring Science Institute. Retrieved November 6, 2008, from http://www.watsoncaringscience.org/index.html http://www.watsoncaringscience.org/index.html


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