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Defining Nursing

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Distinguish between the characteristics of professions and occupations. ... Florence Nightingale. Early twentieth-century definitions. Post-World War II definitions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Defining Nursing


1
Defining Nursing
  • Joan Pollner, RN, BSN, CHPN
  • October 18, 2006

2
Objectives
  • Identify characteristics of a profession.
  • Distinguish between the characteristics of
    professions and occupations.
  • Describe how professions evolve.
  • Evaluate nursings position on the
    professionalism continuum.
  • Explain the elements of nursings contract with
    society.
  • Recognize characteristic behaviors of
    professional nurses.

3
Objectives (continued)
  • Define the benefits of defining nursing and
    nursings scope of practice.
  • Recognize the evolutionary nature of definitions.
  • Compare early definitions of nursing with
    contemporary ones.
  • Recognize the impact of historical, social,
    economic, and political events on definitions of
    nursing and scope and standards of practice.

4
Objectives (continued)
  • Identify commonalities in existing definitions of
    nursing.
  • Develop personal definitions of nursing
  • Name four documents every professional nurse
    should possess and tell why they are important.

5
Characteristics of a Profession
  • Abraham Flexner Early 1900s
  • Richard H. Hall 1968
  • Task Force on Professionalism - 2000

6
Abraham Flexner
  • Intellectual (as opposed to physical)
  • Body of knowledge through research
  • Practical as well as theoretical
  • Highly specialized professional education
  • Strong internal organization of members

7
Richard H. Hall
  • Professional organization
  • Belief in value of public service
  • Belief in self regulation
  • Commitment beyond economic incentives
  • Sense of autonomy in practice

8
Task Force on Professionalism
  • Prolonged specialized training
  • Service orientation
  • Ideology based on original faith
  • Binding ethic
  • Unique body of knowledge
  • Technique formed by set of skills

9
Task Force on Professionalism (cont)
  • Guild of those entitled to practice
  • Licensure or certification
  • Recognized setting
  • Theory of societal benefits

10
Major Similarities
  • Service/altruism
  • Specialized knowledge
  • Autonomy/ethics

11
Professions vs Occupations
  • Professions
  • College or University
  • Prolonged education
  • Mental creativity
  • Decisions based on science or theoretical
    constructs
  • Values, beliefs ethics integral part of
    preparation
  • Strong commitment
  • Autonomous
  • Unlikely to change professions
  • Commitment gt reward
  • Individual accountability
  • Occupations
  • On the job training
  • Length varies
  • Largely manual work
  • Guided decision making
  • Values, beliefs ethics not part of preparation
  • Commitment may vary
  • Supervised
  • Often change jobs
  • Motivated by reward
  • Employer is primarily accountable

12
Evolution of a ProfessionProfessionalization
  • Practitioners perform full-time work in the
    discipline
  • Determine work standards, identify a body of
    knowledge and establish educational programs
  • Promote organization into effective occupational
    associations (licensure/certification)
  • Establish codes of ethics

13
Barriers to Professionalism
  • Variability in educational preparation
  • Gender issues
  • Historical influences
  • External conflicts
  • Internal conflicts

14
What about Nursing???
  • Profession
  • or

  • Occupation

15
What the experts say!!
  • Genevieve and Roy Bixler 1945
  • Lucie Kelly, RN, PhD, FAAN 1981
  • Barbara Miller 1984
  • Nurses themselves

16
Bixler Bixler
  • Specialized knowledge
  • Expands knowledge by scientific method
  • Institutions of higher education
  • Services vital to human and social welfare
  • Autonomously forms professional policy
  • Intellectual and personal qualities
  • Compensation freedom, professional growth and
    economic security

17
Lucie Kelly, RN, PhD, FAAN
  • Services vital to humanity and society
  • Knowledge continually enlarged through research
  • Individual accountability
  • Educated in institutions of higher education
  • Autonomy
  • Motivated by altruism
  • Code of ethics
  • Association high standards of practice

18
Millers Wheel of Professionalism in Nursing
  • Education in univ. scientific background
  • Professional organization
  • Self-regulatory autonomy
  • Research development, use evaluation
  • Continuing education competence
  • Community service
  • Theory development, use evaluation
  • Adherence to Code of Ethics for Nurses
  • Publication and communication

19
Nurses Themselves
  • Nurses Social Policy Statement 2003
  • Code of Ethics for Nurses American Nurses
    Association - 2001

20
Nurses Code of Ethics
  • American Nurses Association
  • 9 provisions
  • Fundamental values and commitments of the nurse
  • Boundaries of duty and loyalty
  • Duties beyond patient encounters
  • Entire document at
  • www.nursingworld.org/ethics/code/ethicscode150.htm

21
CollegialityStandard of ANA Scope and
Standards of Practice, 2004
  • According to Bruhn - 2001
  • Be civil
  • Be ethical
  • Be honest
  • Be the best
  • Be consistent
  • Be a communicator
  • Be accountable

22
Collegiality (cont)
  • Be collaborative
  • Be forgiving
  • Be current
  • Be involved
  • Be a model

23
Why define Nursing???
  • Defines parameters of the profession
  • Clarifies purposed and functions of the work
  • Guides educational preparation
  • Guides research and theory development
  • Provides visibility and value to general public
    and policy makers

24
Evolution of Definitions of Nursing
  • Florence Nightingale
  • Early twentieth-century definitions
  • Post-World War II definitions
  • Professional association definitions
  • Developing definitions

25
Florence Nightingdale
  • Notes on Nursing What It Is and What It Is Not
    (1859)
  • And what nursing has to dois put the patient in
    the best condition for nature to act upon him
  • Recognized the difference between a nurse
    providing care and a layperson providing care.

26
Early Twentieth-century Definitions
  • Shaws Textbook of Nursing 1907
  • Harmers Textbook of the Principles and Practice
    of Nursing 1922
  • Influence of Henderson with Harmer - 1939

27
Post-World War II Definitions
  • Hildegard Peplau 1952
  • Active collaborator
  • Dorothea Orem 1959
  • Self-care
  • Virginia Henderson 1960
  • Adopted by International Council of Nurses
  • Martha Rogers 1961
  • Maximum health potential

28
Professional Association Definitions
  • American Nurses Association
  • Royal College of Nursing
  • International Council of Nursing

29
American Nurses Association2003
  • Caring relationship
  • Human experiences and responses
  • Objective data
  • Scientific knowledge
  • Advancement of professional knowledge
  • Influence on social and public policy

30
Royal College of Nursing2003
  • Core statement
  • Nursing is the use of clinical judgment in the
    provision of care to enable people to improve,
    maintain, or recover health, to cope with health
    problems, and to achieve the best possible
    quality of life, whatever their disease or
    disability, until death.

31
How do you define Nursing??
  • Mary Ally Rob
  • Judy Liam
    Terry
  • Jane Bill
  • Mike Sue
    Tracey
  • John Claudia
    Michelle
  • Brenda Nancy Florence Andy
    Beth Suzanne

32
International Council of Nurses2003
  • Autonomous and collaborative care
  • Promotion of health, prevention of illness
  • Care of ill, disabled and dying
  • Advocacy
  • Research
  • Health policy shaping
  • Education

33
Four document nurses should possess and READ
  • State Nurse Practice Act
  • Nursings Social Policy Statement (ANA)
  • The Code of Ethics for Nurses (ANA)
  • Scope and Standards of Clinical Practice (area
    specific or ANA)

34
Additional Resources
  • Take this self test http//davisplus.fadavis.com/c
    atalano/Assessment_Tools/Assessment_Professionalis
    m.pdf
  • Royal College of Nursing http//davisplus.fadavis.
    com/catalano/Assessment_Tools/Assessment_Professio
    nalism.pdf
  • Royal College of Nursing http//www.rcna.org.au/co
    ntent/professional_self-regulation_march_03_-_unde
    r_review_-_25nov04.pdf
  • University of Utah College of Nursing
    http//www.rcna.org.au/content/professional_self-r
    egulation_march_03_-_under_review_-_25nov04.pdf

35
Reference
  • Chitty, K.K. (2005). Professional nursing
    Concepts and challenges. 4th ed. Philadelphia
    Saunders.
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