Martha Roger ’s: A Brief Introduction to Science of Unitary Human Beings The concept of Unitary Health Care emerged from the revolutionary work of the nursing academic Professor Martha E. Rogers during the 1950s in New York. She created the conceptual health care system that became known throughout the world as the Science of Unitary Human Beings‚ drawing knowledge from a variety of disciplines in the sciences‚ arts and humanities. This holistic view focused on treating the whole patient‚ and not
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Martha Elizabeth Rogers Martha Elizabeth Rogers was born in Dallax Texas on May 12‚ 1914‚ the oldest of four children in a family‚ which strongly valued education. Martha Roger and her family moved to Knoxville‚ TN where she attended the University of Tennessee in l93l taking undergraduate science courses for 2 years. But then she entered nursing school at Knoxville General Hospital‚ received her nursing diploma in 1936. She completed a BSN in Public Health Nursing from George Peabody College in
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Martha E Rogers was born a hundred years ago on March 3rd 1914 in Texas. She died March 13th 1994 in Phoenix‚ Arizona1. A casual occurrence‚ she shared her birthday with Florence Nightingale born 94 years before and had passed away four years before2. They will share more than a birthdate as we will see later namely the role of the nursing as distinct from medicine. One is helping nature while nursing puts the patient in the best environment for nature to act 3 Martha was born in a family which
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Nursing Theorist Hildegard E. Peplau‚ came up with Theory of Interpersonal Relations. Her theory basically means: not what you do to the patient but what you do with the patient. Her theory was based on the idea that nursing is interpersonal because it includes interaction between two or more people. Her theory was the concept of psychodynamic nursing. The main concept was focused on the patient’s feelings as a predictor to a more favorable outcome when it came to the patients’ health
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Predictors of Nurse Burnout Jessica Beitler‚ Tabatha Menapace‚ Lorelei Starr‚ Jodi Swihart NRN 422‚ July 2‚ 2008 Malone College School of Nursing Abstract Aim. To identify characteristics that predict the incidence of burnout in Registered Nurses. Background. Burnout was first described in the early 1970’s by human service professionals and healthcare workers. In 2001‚ The Joint Commission reported that 43 percent of nurses currently working scored high in a range of burnout measures and
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Personality Theorist: A Look at Carl Rogers Through his eyes‚ Carl Rogers’ theory saw people in a basic form‚ which was relatively simple. They were either healthy or good‚ or at the very least‚ they were not bad or ill. This essay will outline his contributions to the field of psychology of personality and point out some of his simple theories. I want to begin by giving you some background on Carl Ransom Rogers. He was born in Oak Park‚ Illinois on January 8‚ 1902. At an early age he demonstrated
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I. Introduction The Science of Unitary Human Beings is a grand nursing theory developed by Martha E. Rogers. Martha Rogers was born on May 12‚ 1914 in Dallas‚ Texas. She is the oldest of four children of Bruce Taylor Rogers and Lucy Mulholland Keener Rogers. She began college at the University of Tennessee‚ studying pre-med (1931-1933) and withdrew due to pressure that medicine was an unsuitable career for a woman. She received a diploma from the Knoxville General Hospital School of Nursing in 1936
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Scholarly Dialogue Nursing Science Quarterly‚ 15:3‚ July 2002 Scholarly Dialogue Jacqueline Fawcett‚ Contributing Editor The Nurse Theorists: 21st-Century Updates—Jean Watson Jacqueline Fawcett‚ RN; PhD; FAAN Professor‚ College of Nursing and Health Sciences‚ University of Massachusetts–Boston This edited transcript of an interview with Jean Watson presents Watson’s recent thoughts about the current state of the discipline of nursing and the emergence of new perspectives; the contributions
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Nursing Theorists 1. Florence Nightingale - Environment theory 2. Hildegard Peplau - Interpersonal theory 3. Virginia Henderson - Need Theory 4. Fay Abdella - Twenty One Nursing Problems 5. Ida Jean Orlando - Nursing Process theory 6. Dorothy Johnson - System model 7. Martha Rogers -Unitary Human beings 8. Dorothea Orem - Self-care theory 9. Imogene King - Goal Attainment theory 10. Betty Neuman - System model 11. Sister Calista Roy - Adaptation
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Theorists Child development theories are an organized set of principles designed to explain and predict something. Below are some major child development theorists and their theories. Jean Piaget – (1896-1980) was originally a biologist before going on to study the development of children’s understanding. He studied children by observing them talking and listening to them whilst he set them tasks to carry out. He came up with the ‘Maturation Theory’ which means that a child simply grows up and
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