2. Jean Watson
An American nursing scholar born in West Virginia, currently living in Colorado
Earned her undergraduate and graduate degrees in nursing psychiatric-mental health
nursing and holds her Ph.D. in educational psychology and counseling from the
university of Colorado
At the University of Colorado, Dr. Watson currently holds the title of Distinguished
Professor of Nursing and the Murchinson-Scoville Chair in Caring Science, the nation’s
first endowed chair in Caring Science, based at the University of Colorado Denver
College of Nursing since 1999.
Founder of the Center for Human Caring in Colorado.
http://www.millionnurseproject.org/index.html
Featured in numerous national videos on nursing theory and the art of nursing.
Recipient of several national and international honors and awards, including The Fetzer
Institute Norman Cousins Award, in recognition of her commitment to developing;
maintaining and exemplifying relationship-centered care practices.
Served as author /co-author of over 14 books ranging from empirical measurements of
caring to new postmodern philosophies of caring and healing.
3. Watson’s Theory of Caring
Developed in 1979
Major Elements:
- Carative Factors
- Transpersonal caring relationship
- Caring occasion/Caring moment
4. Carative Factors
Serve as a guide for the core of nursing
Comprised of 10 elements:
1. Humanistic-altruistic system of value
2. Faith-Hope
3. Sensitivity to self and others
4. Helping-trusting, human care relationship
5. Expressing positive and negative feelings
6. Creative problem-solving caring process
7. Transpersonal teaching-learning
8. Supportive, protective, and/or corrective mental, physical, societal and
spiritual environment
9. Human needs assistant
10. Existential-phenomenological-spiritual forces (Watson, 1988b, p. 75)
As her theory evolved clinical caritas (from the Greek meanings
to cherish and to give special attention) replaced the carative
factors
5. Transpersonal Caring Relationship
A special kind of human care that
depends on:
- The nurse’s moral commitment in
protecting and enhancing human
dignity as well as the deeper self
- The nurse’s caring consciousness
communicated to preserve and
honor the embodied spirit, therefore
not reducing the person to a moral
status of an object
- The nurse’s connection and having
the potential to heal since
experience, perception, and
intentional connection are taking
place
Describes how the nurse goes
beyond the objective
assessment to show concern
toward the person’s
subjective/deeper meaning of
their healthcare situation.
Involves mutuality between
the two individuals involved
6. Caring Occasion/Caring Moment
“The moment (focal point in space and time) when
the nurse and another person come together in
such a way that an occasion for human caring is
created” (Watson, 1988b, 1999).
Both the nurse and one being cared for can be
influenced by the caring moment
7. Theory of Caring in Research
Jean Watson has researched and published the utilization of her theory
multiple times
Jean Watson’s Theory of Caring, among others has been used in research
towards an empirical development of a middle range theory of caring
Research has been conducted and Watson’s theory has been adopted in
multiple institutions throughout the world (Ex: Union Hospital of Cecil
County is adopting Jean Watson’s Theory of Caring for their magnet journey)
Examples of the global use of caring:
http://www.nursing.ucdenver.edu/faculty/jw_connections.htm
Examples of Watson’s Theory used in research:
http://www.nursing.ucdenver.edu/faculty/references.htm
Nurses are able to evaluate their use of the caring theory by this patient survey:
http://www.nursing.ucdenver.edu/faculty/articles/CaringFactorScale.pdf
8. Theory of Caring in Nursing
Nursing is based on the concept of care. Many nurses have adopted Jean
Watson’s Caring Theory in their practice.
Nurses should establish a caring relationship with patients.
Mutuality should be obtained between the nurse and patient concerning the
patient’s healthcare situation and needs.
Nurses should treat patients as holistic beings (body, mind and spirit) with a
positive regard.
Nurses should promote health through knowledge and intervention, and
display acceptance towards patients that is unconditional.
Caring occasions/moments should transform both the patient and nurse, as
they are linked together.
9. Theory of Caring Applied
Carative factors used with postpartum women experiencing multiple
emotions
1. never pass judgments, provide all patients with the same respect and level of care.
2. instill hope in the mothers that they will be able to care for their babies and return to
their “normal” state of health.
3. discuss the patient’s perceptions and feelings towards their birthing/parenting
experiences.
4. provide a trusting relationship where the patient feels that you are committed to helping
them. Advocate for the patient.
5. enable the patient to discuss positive and negative feelings concerning her current
healthcare/home situation.
6 & 7. use creativity during teaching opportunities and holistic treatments involving pain
management.
8. ensure that their environment is comfortable and enables them to get rest. Ensure that
the patient’s home environment is safe for mother and baby upon return.
9 & 10. help patients reach harmony (mind, body, spirit) through holistic and caring
modalities. Promote mother-infant bonding. Assess patient’s support system.
10. Theory of Caring Applied
Carative factors used with patients suffering MI, Stroke, CHF, COPD on a
telemetry floor
1. never pass judgments, provide all patients with the same respect and level of care.
2. instill hope in the patients with MI or Stroke that they will get through this tough time,
and patients with CHF or COPD that they will get through this exacerbation and return
to their baseline health.
3. discuss the patient’s feelings and perceptions about their quality of life and symptom
management.
4. provide a trusting relationship where the patient feels that you are committed to
helping them. Advocate for the patients as needed.
5. enable the patient to discuss positive and negative feelings concerning his/her current
healthcare situation and come to a mutual agreement. Multidisciplinary rounding.
6 & 7. use creativity during teaching opportunities and holistic treatments involving
symptom management. Involve family in teaching as much as possible.
8. ensure that their environment is comfortable and enables them to get rest.
9 & 10. help patients reach harmony (mind, body, spirit) through holistic and caring
modalities. Initiate or continue palliative care and assess patient’s support system.