Jean Watson was a nurse scholar known for developing the Theory of Human Caring. She received several academic degrees including a PhD in nursing. Watson authored numerous books that outlined her theory, which focuses on caring as central to nursing. The theory proposes 10 carative factors that guide nurses to address patient's psychosocial needs through compassionate care. A core concept is the transpersonal caring relationship between nurse and patient. Critics note the theory may be difficult to apply in modern hospital settings with short patient stays. However, Watson's work emphasizes the humanistic aspects of nursing care.
3. Margaret Jean Harman Watson, PhD, RN,
AHNBC was born in Southern West Virginia
and grew up in the small town of Welch, West
Virginia.
1964 – Baccalaureate degree in Nursing
(Boulder Campus)
1966 – Master’s Degree in Psychiatric-Mental
Health Nursing (Health Sciences Campus)
1973 – Doctorate in Educational Psychology
and Counseling (Graduate School, Boulder
Campus)
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4. 1978 – 1981 – Coordinator and Director of
the nursing PhD program (University of
Colorado School of Nursing)
1983 – 1990 – Dean (UC School of Nursing
and Associate Director of Nursing Practice
(University Hospital)
Watson received six honorary doctoral
degrees and three international Honorary
Doctorates.
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5. 1993 – She received the National League for
Nursing Martha E. Rogers Award
1993 – 1996 – served as a member of the
Executive Committee and the Governing Board
and as an officer for the National League for
Nursing
1995 – 1996 – elected president of National
League for Nursing
1998 – recognized as a Distinguished Nurse
Scholar by the University
1999 – assumed the nation’s first Murchison-
Scoville Endowed Chair of Caring Science.
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6. Jean watson has authored 11 books, shared an authoship of six books and
has written countless article in nursing journals.
Her first book, Nursing: The Philosophy and Science of Caring (1979)
Her second book, Nursing: Human Science and Human Care – A Theory of
Nursing(1985)
Her third book, Postmodern Nursing and Beyond (1999)
Collection of 21 instruments used to assess and measure
caring.
Her fifth and latest book, Caring Science as
Sacred Science (2005)
-.
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7. Watson describe two personal life altering event that
contribute to her writing
In 1997, she experienced an accidental injury that resulted
in the loss of her left eye.
soon after in 1998 her husband died.
Watson states that she is "attempting to integrate these
wound in to my life and work. one of the gift though the
suffering was the privilege of experiencing and receiving
my own theory through the care from my husband and
loving nurse friend and colleagues"
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8. 1. Caring can be effectively demonstrated and
practiced only interpersonally.
2. Caring consists of carative factors that result
in the satisfaction of certain human needs.
3. Effective caring promotes health and
individual or family growth.
4. Caring responses accept person to choose
the best action for himself or herself at a given point in
time.
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9. 5. A caring environment allowing the person to choose
the best action for himself or herself at a given point in
time.
6. A science of caring is complementary to the science
of curing.
7. The practice of caring is central to nursing.
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10. The ten carative factors (Greek word “caritas” means
to cherish & appreciate, giving special attention to,
loving factors)
Transpersonal caring relationship
Caring occasion/caring movement
Caring and healing model of theory
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11. The original carative factors served as a guide to
what was referred to as the "core of nursing“.
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12. 1. Formation of a Humanistic-Altruistic System of Values.
- Begins developmentally at an early age with values
shared with the parents.
-Perceived as necessary to the nurse’s own maturation
which then promotes altruistic behaviour towards others.
2. Instillation of Faith-Hope.
- Essential to both the carative and the curative processes.
- When modern science has nothing further to offer the
person, the nurse can continue to use faith-hope to provide
a sense of well-being through beliefs which are meaningful
to the individual.
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13. 3. Cultivation of sensitivity to Self and to Others.
- Explores the need of the nurse to begin to feel an emotion as it presents
itself.
- Development of one’s own feeling is needed to interact genuinely and
sensitively with others.
4. Establishing a helping-trust relationship.
- Strongest tool is the mode of communication, which establishes rapport and
caring.
- She has defined the characteristics needed to in the helping-trust
relationship. These are:
• Congruence
• Empathy
• Warmth
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14. 5. The expression of feelings, both positive and negative.
- “Feelings alter thoughts and behaviour, and they need to be
considered and allowed for in a caring relationship”.
-Awareness of the feelings helps to understand the behaviour.
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6. The systematic use of the scientific problem-solving method for
decision making.
– The scientific problem- solving method is the only method that
allows for control and prediction, and that permits self-correction.
– The science of caring should not be always neutral
and objective.
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15. 7. Promotion of interpersonal teaching-learning.
- The caring nurse must focus on the learning process as much as
the teaching process.
-Understanding the person’s perception of the situation assist the
nurse to prepare a cognitive plan.
8. Provision for a supportive, protective and /or corrective mental,
physical, socio-cultural and spiritual environment.
- Watson divides these into external and internal variables, which
the nurse manipulates in order to provide support and protection
for the person’s mental and physical well-being.
- The external and internal environments are interdependent.
- Watson suggests that the nurse also must provide comfort,
privacy and safety as a part of this carative factor.
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16. 9. Assistance with the gratification of human
Needs.
- Watson’s ordering of need similar to that of the
maslow’s.
- She has created a hierarchy which she believes is
relevant to the science of caring in nursing.
- According to her each need is equally important for
quality nursing care and the promotion of optimal health.
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17. 10. Allowance for existential-phenomenological
forces.
-Phenomenology is a way of understanding people
from the way things appear to them, from their
frame of reference
-This factor helps the nurse to reconcile and
mediate the incongruity of viewing the person
holistically while at the same time attending to the
Hierarchical ordering of needs
-Thus the nurse assists the person to find the
strength or courage to confront life or death.
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18. Lower order needs (biophysical needs).
-The need for food and fluid
-The need for elimination
- The need for ventilation
Lower order needs (psychophysical needs).
-The need for activity-inactivity
- The need for sexuality
Higher order needs (psychosocial needs).
-The need for achievement
- The need for affiliation
- Higher order need (intrapersonal-interpersonal need)
-The need for self-actualization.
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19. Occurs during the ‘caring event’, central to watson’s
view of nursing.
Transpersonal caring seeks to connect the soul
through the processes of caring and healing and being
in authentic relation, in the moment.
Transpersonal conveys a concern for the inner life
world and subjective meaning of another who is fully
embodied.
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20. •1. Moral commitment, intentionality and caritas
consciousness by the nurse protects,
enhances and potentiates human dignity,
wholeness and healing whereby allowing a
person to create or co-create his/her own
meaning for existence, healing ,wholeness and living and
dying.
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21. The nurse’s will and consciousness affirm the
Subjective-spiritual significance of the person while
seeking to sustain caring in the midst of threat and
despair—biological, institutional, or otherwise.
The nurse seeks to recognize, accurately detect, and
connect with the inner condition of spirit of another
through genuine presenting and being centered in the
caring moment.
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22. The nurse’s ability to connect with another at
This transpersonal spirit- to- spirit level is translated via
movements, gestures, facial expressions, procedures,
information, touch, sound, verbal expressions and other
scientific, technical, aesthetic, and human means of
communication, into nursing human art/acts or
intentional caring-healing modalities.
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23. The caring-healing modalities within the context of
transpersonal caring/caritas consciousness potentiate
harmony, the blocked energy that interferes with the
natural healing processes; thus the nurse helps
another through this process to access the healer
within, in the fullest sense of Nightingale’s view of
nursing.
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24. Personal and professional development and spiritual
growth, and personal spiritual practice assist the nurse
in entering into this deeper level of professional
healing practice.
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25. Other facilitators are personal growth experiences such
as psychotherapy, transpersonal psychology,
meditation, bio-energetics work, and other models for
spiritual awakening.
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26. A caring occasion occurs whenever the nurse and
another come together with their unique life histories
and phenomenal fields in a human-to-human
transaction.
A caring moment involves an action and choice by
both the nurse and other.
To decide how to be in the moment, in the
relationship—what to do with and in the moment.
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27. It includes the following points,
The whole caring-healing-loving consciousness
is contained within a single caring moment.
The one caring and the one being cared for are
interconnected; the caring-healing process is
connected with the other human(s) and with
the higher energy of the universe.
The caring-healing-loving consciousness of the
nurse is communicated to the one being cared
for.
Caring-healing-loving consciousness exists
through and transcends time and space and can
be dominant over physical dimensions.
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28. The caring model or theory can also be considered a
central focus for nursing at the disciplinary level.
Model of caring includes art, science, humanities,
spirituality, and new dimensions of mind body spirit
medicine.
Nursing evolving openly as central to human
phenomena of nursing practice.
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30. According to watson “ nursing is concerned with
Promoting health, preventing illness, caring for the
Sick and restoring health”.
It focuses on health promotion and treatment of
Disease. She believes that holistic health care is
Central to the practice of caring in nursing.
She defines nursing as,
“A human science of persons and human health, illness
Experiences that are mediated by professional, personal,
scientific, esthetic and ethical human transactions”.
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31. Watson uses interchangeably the terms Human being,
person, life personhood and Self. She views the person
as “a unity of mind/body/spirit/nature” and describes
that,
“Personhood is tied to notions that one’s soul
Possess a body that is not confined by objective time and
space..”
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32. Definition of health was derived from the world health
organization as, “the positive state of physical, mental,
and social well-being with the inclusion of three
elements: (1) a high level of overall physical, mental,
and social functioning; (2) a general adaptive-
maintenance level of daily functioning; (3) the absence
of illness (or the presence of efforts that lead to its
absence)”.
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33. Later she defined health as,
“unity and harmony within the mind, body and soul”. It
is associated with the “degree of congruence between
the self as perceived and the self as experienced”.
Futher watson stated,
“Illness is not necessarily disease; instead it is a subjective
turmoil of disharmony within a person’s inner self or
soul.”
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34. Nurse’s role in the environment as “attending to
supportive, protective, and or corrective mental,
physical, societal, and spiritual environments”.
later on she had a much broader view of
environment:
“the caring science is not only for sustaining humanity,
but also for sustaining the planet . . . Belonging is to an
infinite universal spirit world of nature and all living
things”.
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35. Jean watson states that “healing spaces can be used to
help others transcend illness, pain, and suffering,”
emphasizing the environment and person connection:
“when the nurse enters the patient’s room, a magnetic
field of expectation is created”.
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37. Assist to provide the quality of care
and also provides the soul satisfying care for which many
nurses enter the profession.
The client is placed in the context of the family, the
community and the culture.
It places the client as the focus of practice rather than
the technology.
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38. The acuity of illness that leads to hospitalization, the
short length stay , and the increasing complex
technology, such quality of care may be deemed
impossible to give in the hospital.
While Watson acknowledges the need for biophysical
base to nursing, this area receives little attention in her
writings.
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39. The ten caratiive factors primarily delineate
The psychosocial needs of the person.
While the carative factors have a sound
Foundation based on other disciplines, they need further
research in nursing to demonstrate their application to
practice.
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41. History of jean watson
life altering event that contribute to her writing
Conceptual elements
Carative factors
Transpersonal relationship
Major concept of theory
Strengths
limitations
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42. Martha raile alligood(2014). Nursing theorist and their
work(8th ed.).USA; Mosby,Elsevier, p.p-79-90.
Marilyn E.Parker(2005). Nursing theories & nursing
practise(2nd ed). New Delhi;F.A.Davis company, Jaypee
brothers, P.P-295-305.
www.nurses.info
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