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Behavioral system
model
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Sheena
Samontina
Kenneth
Castro
Kimberly
Lingad
PRESENTERS
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biography
X
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• Dorothy E. Johnson (August 21, 1919 – February 1999) was one
of the greatest nursing theorists who developed the “Behavioral
System Model.”
• Dorothy Johnson was born on August 21, 1919, in Savannah,
Georgia. She was the youngest of seven children
• In 1938, she finished her associate’s degree at Armstrong Junior
College in Savannah, Georgia
• Dorothy Johnson’s professional nursing career began in 1942 when
she graduated from Vanderbilt University School of Nursing in
Nashville, Tennessee
• In 1948, she received her Master’s in public health from Harvard
University in Boston, Massachusetts.
Dorothy e. johnson
X
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• Her 1968 paper, entitled, One Conceptual Model of Nursing, is a
classic contribution to Nursing literature.
• Two of Johnson’s many works include Theory Development: What,
Why, How? and Barriers and Hazards in Counseling.
• Dorothy Johnson died in February 1999 at the age of 80
Dorothy e. johnson
X
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Dorothy Johnson’s theory defined Nursing as “an external regulatory force which
acts to preserve the organization and integration of the patient’s behaviors at an
optimum level under those conditions in which the behavior constitutes a threat
to the physical or social health, or in which illness is found.”
It also states that “each individual has patterned, purposeful, repetitive ways of
acting that comprises a behavioral system specific to that individual.”
Johnson's behavioral system model
X
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1. To assist the patient whose behavior commensurate with social demands.
2. To assist the patient who is able to modify his/ her behavior in ways that
supports biological imperatives.
3. To assist the patient who is able to benefit to the fullest extent during illness
from physicians knowledge and skills.
4. To assist the patient whose behavior does not give evidence of unnecessary
trauma as a consequence of illness.
4 goals of nursing to assist the patient
X
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❖ (1) There is “organization, interaction, interdependency and
integration of the parts and elements of behaviors that go to make
up the system.”
❖ (2) A system “tends to achieve a balance among the various forces
operating within and upon it, and that man strives continually to
maintain a behavioral system balance and steady-state by more or
less automatic adjustments and adaptations to the natural forces
occurring on him.”
❖ (3) A behavioral system, which requires and results in regularity and
constancy in behavior, is essential to man. It is functionally
significant because it serves a useful purpose in social life and the
individual. And
❖ (4) “System balance reflects adjustments and adaptations that are
successful in some way and to some degree.”
assumptions
X
Start 11:57 PM
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❖ (1)“From the form the behavior takes and the consequences it
achieves can be inferred what ‘drive’ has been stimulated or what
‘goal’ is being sought.”
❖ (2) Each person has a “predisposition to act concerning the goal, in
certain ways rather than the other ways.” This predisposition is
called a “set.”
❖ (3) Each subsystem has a repertoire of choices called a “scope of
action.”
❖ (4) The individual patient’s behavior produces an outcome that can
be observed.
•
Assumptions about structure and function
X
Start 11:57 PM
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PERSON
Johnson views human beings as having two major
systems: the biological system and the behavioral
system. It is the role of medicine to focus on the
biological system, whereas nursing focuses on the
behavioral system.
Metaparadigm
X
Start 11:57 PM
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HEALTH
Health is an elusive state that is affected by social,
psychological, biological and physiological
factors. Johnson's behavioral model supports the
idea that the individual is striving to retain some
balance or equilibrium
Metaparadigm
X
Start 11:57 PM
meet.google.com
ENVIRONMENT
According to Johnson, an individual's behavior is
influenced by all events in the environment.
Cultural influences on the individuals behavior are
viewed as profound.
Metaparadigm
X
Start 11:57 PM
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NURSING
The primary goal of nursing is to cultivate
equilibrium within individual, which allows for the
practice of nursing with individuals
Metaparadigm
X
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Attachment or affiliative subsystem
Attachment or affiliative subsystem is the “social inclusion intimacy and the
formation and attachment of a strong social bond.” It is probably the most
critical because it forms the basis for all social organizations. On a general
level, it provides survival and security. Its consequences are social inclusion,
intimacy, and the formation and maintenance of a strong social bond.
7 subsystems of behavioral system
model
X
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Dependency subsystem
The dependency subsystem is the “approval, attention or recognition and
physical assistance.” In the broadest sense, it promotes helping behavior that
calls for a nurturing response. Its consequences are approval, attention or
recognition, and physical assistance. Developmentally, dependency behavior
evolves from almost total dependence on others to a greater degree of
dependence on self. A certain amount of interdependence is essential for the
survival of social groups
7 subsystems of behavioral system
model
X
Start 11:57 PM
meet.google.com
Ingestive subsystem
An ingestive subsystem is the “emphasis on the meaning and structures of the
social events surrounding the occasion when the food is eaten.” It should not
be seen as the input and output mechanisms of the system. All subsystems are
distinct subsystems with their own input and output mechanisms.
The ingestive subsystem “has to do with when, how, what, how much, and
under what conditions we eat.”
7 subsystems of behavioral system
model
X
Start 11:57 PM
meet.google.com
Eliminative subsystem
Eliminative subsystem states that “human cultures have defined different
socially acceptable behaviors for excretion of waste, but the existence of such a pattern
remains different from culture to culture.” It addresses “when, how, and under what
conditions we eliminate.” As with the ingestive subsystem, the social and psychological
factors influence the biological aspects of this subsystem and may conflict with the
eliminative subsystem.
7 subsystems of behavioral system
model
X
Start 11:57 PM
meet.google.com
Sexual subsystem
A sexual subsystem is both a biological and social factor that affects behavior.
It has the dual functions of procreation and gratification. Including, but not
limited to, courting and mating, this response system begins with the
development of gender role identity and includes a broad range of sex-role
behaviors.
7 subsystems of behavioral system
model
X
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Aggressive subsystem
The aggressive subsystem relates to protection and self-preservation,
generating a defense response when there is a threat to life or territory. Its
function is protection and preservation. Society demands that limits be placed
on self-protection modes and that people and their property be respected and
protected.
7 subsystems of behavioral system
model
X
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Achievement subsystem
The achievement subsystem provokes behavior that tries to control the
environment. It attempts to manipulate the environment. Its function is to
control or mastery an aspect of self or environment to some standard of
excellence. Areas of achievement behavior include intellectual, physical,
creative, mechanical, and social skills.
7 subsystems of behavioral system
model
X
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X
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The nursing process of the Behavior System Model of Nursing begins with assessing and
diagnosing the patient. Once a diagnosis is made, the nurse and other healthcare
professionals develop a nursing care plan of interventions and setting them in motion. The
process ends with an evaluation, which is based on the balance of the subsystems.
Johnson’s Behavioral System Model is best applied in the evaluation phase, during which
time the nurse can determine whether or not there is balance in the subsystems of the
patient. If a nurse helps a patient maintain an equilibrium of the behavioral system through
an illness in the biological system, they have been successful in the role.
The nursing process
X
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Strengths
Dorothy Johnson’s theory guides nursing practice, education, and research, generate new ideas
about nursing; and differentiates nursing from other health professions. It has been used in
inpatient, outpatient, and community settings as well as in nursing administration. It has always
been useful to nursing education and has been used in educational institutions in different parts of
the world.
Another advantage of the theory is that Johnson provided a frame of reference for nurses concerned
with specific client behaviors. It can also be generalized across the lifespan and cultures. The theory
also has the potential for continued utility in nursing to achieve valued nursing goals.
Strengths and weaknesses
X
Start 11:57 PM
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Weaknesses
The theory is potentially complex because there are several possible interrelationships among the
behavioral system, its subsystems, and the environment. Potential relationships have been explored,
but more empirical work is needed. Johnson’s work has been used extensively with people who are
ill or face the threat of illness. However, its use with families, groups, and communities is limited.
Though the seven subsystems identified by Johnson are said to be open, linked, and interrelated,
there is a lack of clear definitions for the interrelationships among them, making it difficult to view
the entire behavioral system as an entity. The problem involving the interrelationships among the
concepts also creates difficulty following the logic of Johnson’s work.
Strengths and weaknesses
X
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johnsons-bsm.pdf

  • 1. Start 11:57 PM school files google meet random
  • 2. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Google meet WELCOME! Click new meeting to start the presentation. New meeting Enter a code or link Create a meeting for later Start an instant meeting Schedule in google calendar
  • 7. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com • Dorothy E. Johnson (August 21, 1919 – February 1999) was one of the greatest nursing theorists who developed the “Behavioral System Model.” • Dorothy Johnson was born on August 21, 1919, in Savannah, Georgia. She was the youngest of seven children • In 1938, she finished her associate’s degree at Armstrong Junior College in Savannah, Georgia • Dorothy Johnson’s professional nursing career began in 1942 when she graduated from Vanderbilt University School of Nursing in Nashville, Tennessee • In 1948, she received her Master’s in public health from Harvard University in Boston, Massachusetts. Dorothy e. johnson X
  • 8. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com • Her 1968 paper, entitled, One Conceptual Model of Nursing, is a classic contribution to Nursing literature. • Two of Johnson’s many works include Theory Development: What, Why, How? and Barriers and Hazards in Counseling. • Dorothy Johnson died in February 1999 at the age of 80 Dorothy e. johnson X
  • 9. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Dorothy Johnson’s theory defined Nursing as “an external regulatory force which acts to preserve the organization and integration of the patient’s behaviors at an optimum level under those conditions in which the behavior constitutes a threat to the physical or social health, or in which illness is found.” It also states that “each individual has patterned, purposeful, repetitive ways of acting that comprises a behavioral system specific to that individual.” Johnson's behavioral system model X
  • 10. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com 1. To assist the patient whose behavior commensurate with social demands. 2. To assist the patient who is able to modify his/ her behavior in ways that supports biological imperatives. 3. To assist the patient who is able to benefit to the fullest extent during illness from physicians knowledge and skills. 4. To assist the patient whose behavior does not give evidence of unnecessary trauma as a consequence of illness. 4 goals of nursing to assist the patient X
  • 11. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com ❖ (1) There is “organization, interaction, interdependency and integration of the parts and elements of behaviors that go to make up the system.” ❖ (2) A system “tends to achieve a balance among the various forces operating within and upon it, and that man strives continually to maintain a behavioral system balance and steady-state by more or less automatic adjustments and adaptations to the natural forces occurring on him.” ❖ (3) A behavioral system, which requires and results in regularity and constancy in behavior, is essential to man. It is functionally significant because it serves a useful purpose in social life and the individual. And ❖ (4) “System balance reflects adjustments and adaptations that are successful in some way and to some degree.” assumptions X
  • 12. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com ❖ (1)“From the form the behavior takes and the consequences it achieves can be inferred what ‘drive’ has been stimulated or what ‘goal’ is being sought.” ❖ (2) Each person has a “predisposition to act concerning the goal, in certain ways rather than the other ways.” This predisposition is called a “set.” ❖ (3) Each subsystem has a repertoire of choices called a “scope of action.” ❖ (4) The individual patient’s behavior produces an outcome that can be observed. • Assumptions about structure and function X
  • 13. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com PERSON Johnson views human beings as having two major systems: the biological system and the behavioral system. It is the role of medicine to focus on the biological system, whereas nursing focuses on the behavioral system. Metaparadigm X
  • 14. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com HEALTH Health is an elusive state that is affected by social, psychological, biological and physiological factors. Johnson's behavioral model supports the idea that the individual is striving to retain some balance or equilibrium Metaparadigm X
  • 15. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com ENVIRONMENT According to Johnson, an individual's behavior is influenced by all events in the environment. Cultural influences on the individuals behavior are viewed as profound. Metaparadigm X
  • 16. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com NURSING The primary goal of nursing is to cultivate equilibrium within individual, which allows for the practice of nursing with individuals Metaparadigm X
  • 17. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Attachment or affiliative subsystem Attachment or affiliative subsystem is the “social inclusion intimacy and the formation and attachment of a strong social bond.” It is probably the most critical because it forms the basis for all social organizations. On a general level, it provides survival and security. Its consequences are social inclusion, intimacy, and the formation and maintenance of a strong social bond. 7 subsystems of behavioral system model X
  • 18. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Dependency subsystem The dependency subsystem is the “approval, attention or recognition and physical assistance.” In the broadest sense, it promotes helping behavior that calls for a nurturing response. Its consequences are approval, attention or recognition, and physical assistance. Developmentally, dependency behavior evolves from almost total dependence on others to a greater degree of dependence on self. A certain amount of interdependence is essential for the survival of social groups 7 subsystems of behavioral system model X
  • 19. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Ingestive subsystem An ingestive subsystem is the “emphasis on the meaning and structures of the social events surrounding the occasion when the food is eaten.” It should not be seen as the input and output mechanisms of the system. All subsystems are distinct subsystems with their own input and output mechanisms. The ingestive subsystem “has to do with when, how, what, how much, and under what conditions we eat.” 7 subsystems of behavioral system model X
  • 20. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Eliminative subsystem Eliminative subsystem states that “human cultures have defined different socially acceptable behaviors for excretion of waste, but the existence of such a pattern remains different from culture to culture.” It addresses “when, how, and under what conditions we eliminate.” As with the ingestive subsystem, the social and psychological factors influence the biological aspects of this subsystem and may conflict with the eliminative subsystem. 7 subsystems of behavioral system model X
  • 21. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Sexual subsystem A sexual subsystem is both a biological and social factor that affects behavior. It has the dual functions of procreation and gratification. Including, but not limited to, courting and mating, this response system begins with the development of gender role identity and includes a broad range of sex-role behaviors. 7 subsystems of behavioral system model X
  • 22. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Aggressive subsystem The aggressive subsystem relates to protection and self-preservation, generating a defense response when there is a threat to life or territory. Its function is protection and preservation. Society demands that limits be placed on self-protection modes and that people and their property be respected and protected. 7 subsystems of behavioral system model X
  • 23. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Achievement subsystem The achievement subsystem provokes behavior that tries to control the environment. It attempts to manipulate the environment. Its function is to control or mastery an aspect of self or environment to some standard of excellence. Areas of achievement behavior include intellectual, physical, creative, mechanical, and social skills. 7 subsystems of behavioral system model X
  • 25. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com The nursing process of the Behavior System Model of Nursing begins with assessing and diagnosing the patient. Once a diagnosis is made, the nurse and other healthcare professionals develop a nursing care plan of interventions and setting them in motion. The process ends with an evaluation, which is based on the balance of the subsystems. Johnson’s Behavioral System Model is best applied in the evaluation phase, during which time the nurse can determine whether or not there is balance in the subsystems of the patient. If a nurse helps a patient maintain an equilibrium of the behavioral system through an illness in the biological system, they have been successful in the role. The nursing process X
  • 26. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Strengths Dorothy Johnson’s theory guides nursing practice, education, and research, generate new ideas about nursing; and differentiates nursing from other health professions. It has been used in inpatient, outpatient, and community settings as well as in nursing administration. It has always been useful to nursing education and has been used in educational institutions in different parts of the world. Another advantage of the theory is that Johnson provided a frame of reference for nurses concerned with specific client behaviors. It can also be generalized across the lifespan and cultures. The theory also has the potential for continued utility in nursing to achieve valued nursing goals. Strengths and weaknesses X
  • 27. Start 11:57 PM meet.google.com Weaknesses The theory is potentially complex because there are several possible interrelationships among the behavioral system, its subsystems, and the environment. Potential relationships have been explored, but more empirical work is needed. Johnson’s work has been used extensively with people who are ill or face the threat of illness. However, its use with families, groups, and communities is limited. Though the seven subsystems identified by Johnson are said to be open, linked, and interrelated, there is a lack of clear definitions for the interrelationships among them, making it difficult to view the entire behavioral system as an entity. The problem involving the interrelationships among the concepts also creates difficulty following the logic of Johnson’s work. Strengths and weaknesses X
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