Nursing Philosophy
Nursing Philosophy
Nursing Philosophy
Amy M Jackowell
Nursing philosophy guides Nursing practice, and every nurse has a personal philosophy
that guides their work. My nursing philosophy is ever-evolving based on my shifting worldview
and growing experience. During my foundational nursing concepts class from the beginning of
my nursing school career, I described the purpose of nursing as applying medical knowledge to
the lives of patients outside of just their stay in the hospital, believing that a nurse's ability to
understand the patient as a complex individual and the ability to build rapport are the strongest
tools a nurse can use to create lasting change. Today, as a soon-to-be new grad nurse, my
philosophy has progressed by integrating the knowledge from nursing theorists Lydia Hill and
Definition of Nursing
The International Council of Nursing (ICN, 2023) states that "nursing encompasses
autonomous and collaborative care of individuals of all ages, families, groups, and communities,
sick or well and in all settings…" and includes promotion of health, prevention of illness, and
care of the client and involves patient advocacy, research, patient education, participation in
policy development and the promotion of a safe environment. Defining what a nurse is can be
difficult because the scope of nursing is so broad and much of what goes into nursing is cerebral.
The American Nurses Association (ANA, 2017) acknowledges the vast differences in function,
education, and expertise of nurses due to the varied areas of health care a nurse may specialize in
and instead defines a nurse by their use of the five-step nursing process: assessment, diagnosis,
by learning what nursing is not. For example, nursing practice is distinct from medical practice;
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the first focuses on healing, and the second focuses on curing. A physician's diagnosis identifies
the illness and cures it, whereas the nurse's diagnosis identifies the problems caused by that
illness and remedies them. The problems that cause and are caused by these illnesses can be
physical, emotional, behavioral, environmental, and societal; therefore, their solutions may be
too complicated to be remedied during a single hospital visit. My definition of a nurse is a global
thinker who utilizes the nursing process to better the human experience of those under their care.
Purpose of Nursing
My desire to enter nursing was born out of the desire to live through as much of the
human experience as possible, optimistically assuming that it was joyous. However, early in my
experience as a caretaker, I learned that this assumption was wrong and that at least half of the
things we as people can experience are profoundly miserable and that some people experience
more misery than joy in their lives as a result of the circumstances and bodies into which they
way of trying to tip the scales toward joy in whatever minor way I can because I know that even
minor actions can create major impacts in the lives of individuals. The purpose of nursing is to
better the lives of those under your care. As previously explained, it is not the nurse's role to cure
an illness, and its resolution within the body is not under the control of nursing, but the
management and remedy of how that illness manifests in and affects the individuals' ability to
live their life is. All people should be able to live as they see fit, with as much joy as possible and
as little suffering as necessary. The purpose of nursing is to bring that idea into reality.
Assumptions
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According to Gonzalo (2023a), Lydia Hall's Care, Cure, and Core Theory explain the
function of nurses in health care promotion with the client and other medical professionals. The
individual receiving care is the core and the source of motivation and energy behind the healing
process. Although the motivation can not be sourced externally, the nurse may act as a sounding
board for the client, helping them identify their inner motivations and gain the self-awareness
needed to recover.
The cure aspect of the model is shared with other medical professionals, and the nurse
will work more closely with other healthcare specialties focusing on treating a client's physical
illness. For example, under the direction of a physician, the nurse will carry out tasks designed to
treat the source of the patient's illness while simultaneously delivering nursing care. Nursing care
includes physical care, comfort measures, and patient teaching and falls solely within the scope
of nursing. This theory assumes that care, cure, and core function together and that as they
interact, emphasis on these spheres may shift according to the patient's needs.
Hall's theory focuses on the individual and does not directly address the nurses' role
within the community; however, if combined with Martha Roger's Science of Unitary Human
Beings Theory, the individual can be viewed as inseparable from their environment (Gonzalo,
2023b). From this lens, knowing the impact of humans on their environment and vice versa, the
art of nursing can be applied to the community as well, making involvement in the development
of health care policy and advocacy for all people a key aspect of the role of nursing.
One moral principle guiding my nursing practice is the responsibility to maintain the
dignity of those I care for. This principle can be found in the ANA's Code of Ethics for Nurses
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(2015) under Provision 1: " the nurse practices with compassion and respect for the inherent
dignity, worth, and unique attributes of every person." (page 18.) I prioritize this principle
because the individual is important to nursing practice, and a person's dignity must be preserved
so that what makes the individual can be maintained. In my experience, when someone's sense of
worth is stripped away, important aspects of the client are hidden from the nurse, who is then
unable to act as a sounding board and assist the patient in uncovering their inner motivations,
which complicates the healing process. I practiced this principle during my rehab clinical with a
young patient recovering from lupus, who was on Lasix and suffering from mobility disturbances
which caused her to wet herself on the way to the bathroom. Being accustomed to her
independence, in her current state, she felt very defeated. With my patient's dignity in mind, I
took every opportunity to maintain her self-image, whether that be listening to her express how
these new body changes made her feel to ensuring that she had clean clothes, whether that meant
handwashing soiled clothes in the sink or prowling the lost and found for clothing that not only
fit her correctly but also matched her gender expression as a queer person. I found that this
patient reacted positively to this treatment by putting more effort into movement outside physical
Another moral and ethical principle that I feel strongly about applying to nursing practice
can also be found in the ANA's Book of Nursing Ethics (2015) as Provision 3 " the nurse
promotes, advocates for, and protects the rights, health, and safety of the patient" (p.26). I
practiced this while working with a recently paraplegic patient participating in transfers from the
wheelchair to the bed with a physical therapist. The interactions I had observed between the
patient and the physical therapist, the technique, and how it was taught raised concern about
potential patient injury, which I brought to the nurse in charge of me. This led to a discussion
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with the patient where they expressed discomfort with this physical therapist and preferred not to
work with them going forward. This instance falls under provision three because nurses are
obligated to advocate for patients and their patient's safety and report practice that appears
unsafe. This was an uncomfortable situation at the time, and I felt unsure whether or how to
address it. However, I learned that erring on the side of caution is always better than missing a
potential risk to patient safety. Continuing in my nursing career, I intend to act on this principle
when necessary, raising concerns appropriately to maintain an environment of safety for those
under my care.
Conclusion
Nursing is the use of global thinking and the nursing process to heal not only individual
patients but groups, systems, and societies to improve humankind's lived experience. My
assumptions that nurses interact with patients not only through physical care but also as a
sounding board for their inner motivations and that nursing though distinct from the other
specialties works alongside them within the healthcare system can best be understood through
Lydia Hall's care, cure, and core theory. Moreover, Martha Roger's Science of Unitary Human
Beings Theory shows that nursing applies beyond individual patients. My nursing philosophy
has caused me to prioritize and practice respect for patient dignity and commitment to
maintaining a safe environment for the patient within the healthcare system. Compared to my
earlier ideas of nursing, this current philosophy accounts for the many roles a nurse can play
because it focuses on a way of thinking and the goal of improving the human experience for all.
Going forward in my nursing career, I plan to expand this philosophy and refine it further as I am
References
American Nurses Association. (2015, January). Code of Ethics for Nurses: With Interpretive
excellence/ethics/code-of-ethics-for-nurses/
American Nurses Association. (2017, October 14). What is nursing & what do nurses do?: Ana
https://www.nursingworld.org/practice-policy/workforce/what-is-nursing
Gonzalo, A. (2023a, January 12). Lydia Hall: Care, cure, core nursing theory. Nurseslabs.
theory/
Gonzalo, A. (2023b, January 12). Martha Rogers: Science of unitary human beings. Nurseslabs.
International Council of Nursing. (n.d.). Nursing definitions. ICN. January 25, 2023,
https://www.icn.ch/nursing-policy/nursing-definitions