TFN Theory 1-14

  1. He died in California on June 8, 1970 of a heart attack.
    Abraham Maslow
  2. A theory of motivation which states that five categories of human needs dictate an individual’s behavior
    Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
  3. What are the 5 categories of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs?
    • Self-actualization
    • Esteem needs
    • Love/Belonging needs
    • Safety Needs
    • Physiological Needs
  4. If you fail to meet these needs, you'll experience harmful or unpleasant results.
    Deficiency Needs
  5. You are not harmed when these needs go unfulfilled.
    Growth Needs
  6. Henry "Harry" Stack Sullivan was considered to be _____________.
    The Father of Interpersonal Psychiatry
  7. A relatively enduring pattern of recurrent interpersonal relationships which characterize a human life
    Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory
  8. Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory explains the role of ____________ and ___________ in shaping up human personalities.
    interpersonal relationships, social experiences
  9. Sullivan observed that the way people interact with others helps us understand their _______________.
    mental health situation
  10. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) potential to action
    tension
  11. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) needs lead to _______
    actions
  12. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) anxiety leads to _______
    thoughts
  13. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) A consistent pattern of behavior that defines us and protects us from anxiety
    self-system
  14. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) 2 types of security operations
    disassociation and selective inattention
  15. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) distancing yourself from something connected to you
    disassociation
  16. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) ignoring any threatening events that are likely to cause anxiety
    selective inattention
  17. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) Threefold classification of experience
    • Prototaxic
    • Parataxic
    • Syntaxic
  18. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) discrete series of momentary states of the sensitive organism
    prototaxic
  19. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) seeing casual relationships between events occur at about the same time but which are not logically related
    parataxic
  20. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) consensually validated symbol activity, especially of a verbal nature
    syntaxic
  21. (Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory) enumerate the development epochs
    • -Infancy (gratification of needs)
    • -Childhood (delayed gratification)
    • -Juvenile (formation of a peer group)
    • -Pre-Adolescence (development of relationships within the same gender)
    • -Early Adolescence (develops an identity)
    • -Late Adolescence (formation of lasting, intimate relationships)
  22. General systems theory came from Austrian biologist ____________'s research in the 1940s-50s and published in 1968.
    Ludwig von Bertalanffy
  23. ________________ is a study that explores general principles for
    intricate groupings called "systems" that have functional integrities.
    General Systems Theory (GST)
  24. (GST) What are the 4 attributes of a system?
    • -Interrelation (interactions exist within a system)
    • -Levels (elements that build up a larger system)
    • -Dynamic (tends to adapt to changes in its environment)
    • -Finality (a system tends to be in a stable state)
  25. GST is a ___________________.
    general science of wholeness
  26. Systems theory is easily summed up with a simple definition: “____________________________.” Put another way, anything individuals do impacts others around the system.
    The whole is greater than the sum of its parts
  27. Father of Social Psychology
    Kurt Lewin
  28. simple and easy-to-understand framework to humanize the change management process
    Lewin's Change Theory
  29. (Lewin's Change Theory) 3 major concepts
    • -driving force
    • -equilibrium
    • -resisting force
  30. (Lewin's Change Theory) 3 stages
    • -unfreezing
    • -change
    • -refreezing
  31. A pioneering Hungarian-Canadian endocrinologist who conducted important scientific work on the hypothetical non-specific response of an organism to stressors.
    János Hugo Bruno "Hans" Selye
  32. any type of change that causes physical, emotional, or psychological strain; how we react when we feel under pressure or threatened
    stress
  33. The three-stage process that describes the physiological changes the body goes through when under stress
    General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)
  34. Based on Selye's experiment, he observed a series of _____________ in the rats after they were exposed to stressful events, thus he concluded that this phenomenon is a typical response to stress.
    physiological changes
  35. (GAS) 3 stages
    • -alarm
    • -resistance
    • -exhaustion
  36. (GAS) What the body experiences or the changes when under stress
    Initial symptoms
  37. (GAS) Natural reaction prepares you to either flee or protect yourself
    Fight-or-flight response
  38. (GAS) heart rate increases, adrenal gland releases cortisol, boost of adrenaline
    Physiological reaction
  39. (GAS) releases a lower amount of cortisol, returning your heart rate and blood pressure to normal
    Recovery phase
  40. (GAS) drain your physical, emotional, and mental resources
    prolonged stress
  41. (GAS)your body no longer has strength to fight stress
    point of hopelessness
  42. He is most famously known for his theory of cognitive development that looked at how children develop intellectually throughout the course of childhood.
    Jean William Fritz Piaget
  43. It chronicled young people's journeys from basic object identification to highly abstract thought; how children think, explore, and figure things out.
    Piaget's Cognitive Development
  44. (Piaget's Cognitive Development) 4 stages of mental development
    • -Sensorimotor stage (birth to 2)
    • -Preoperational stage (2 to 7)
    • -Concrete operational stage (7 to 11)
    • -Formal operational stage (12 and up)
  45. (Piaget's Cognitive Development) involves learning through motor actions and takes place when children are 0-2 yrs old
    Sensorimotor stage
  46. (Piaget's Cognitive Development) children aged 3-7 develop intelligence through the use of symbolic language, fantasy play and natural intuition
    Preoperational stage
  47. (Piaget's Cognitive Development) children 8-11 develop cognitively through the use of logic that is based on concrete evidence
    Concrete operational stage
  48. (Piaget's Cognitive Development) involves 12-15-yr-olds forming the ability to think abstractly with more complex understandings of logic and cause and effect
    Formal operational stage
  49. A theory that focuses on how children develop morality and moral reasoning
    (Lawrence) Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development
  50. the process by which people develop the distinction between right and wrong (morality) and engage in reasoning between the two (moral reasoning)
    moral development
  51. (Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development) 3 levels of moral development
    • -Preconventional morality
    • -Conventional morality
    • -Postconventional morality
  52. (Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development) According to Kohlberg, people at this stage see rules as fixed and absolute. Obeying the rules is important because it is a way to avoid punishment.
    Stage 1 (Obedience & Punishment)
  53. (Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development) At this stage of moral development, children account for individual points of view and judge actions based on how they serve individual needs.
    Stage 2 (Individualism & Exchange)
  54. (Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development) Often referred to as the "good boy-good girl" orientation, this stage of the interpersonal relationship of moral development is focused on living up to social expectations and roles.
    Stage 3 (Developing Good Interpersonal Relationships)
  55. (Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development) This stage is focused on ensuring that social order is maintained.
    Stage 4 (Maintaining Social Order)
  56. (Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development) This stage causes people in the next stage to begin to account for the differing values, opinions, and beliefs of other people.
    Stage 5 (Social Contract & Individual Rights)
  57. (Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development) At this stage, people follow these internalized principles of justice, even if they conflict with laws and rules.
    Stage 6 (Universal Principles)
  58. In Jean Watson's Philosophy and Science of Human Care, what are the 10 carative factors?
    • 1. Forming altruistic value systems
    • 2. Instilling faith and hope to the person
    • 3. Sensitivity to self and other people
    • 4. Developing a helping-trust relationship
    • 5. Promote expressing feelings
    • 6. Usage of problem solving
    • 7. Promotion of interpersonal teaching-learning
    • 8. Promoting supportive environment
    • 9. Assisting with gratification of human needs
    • 10. Allowing phenomenology forces
  59. This nursing theory proposes that expert nurses develop skills and understanding of patient care over time through a proper educational background as well as a multitude of experiences.
    Novice to Expert Theory (by Patricia Benner)
  60. Dr. Benner’s theory is not focused on how to be a nurse, rather on how
    nurses acquire nursing knowledge. True or False?
    True
  61. (Novice to Expert Theory) 5 stages of nursing expertise
    • -Novice
    • -Advanced beginner
    • -Competent
    • -Proficient
    • -Expert
  62. (Novice to Expert Theory) _______ have a very limited ability to predict what might happen in a particular patient situation.
    Novices
  63. (Novice to Expert Theory) They have the knowledge and the know-how but not enough in-depth experience.
    Advanced Beginner
  64. (Novice to Expert Theory) __________ nurses recognize patterns and nature of clinical situations more quickly and accurately than advanced beginners.
    Competent
  65. (Novice to Expert Theory) ______ nurses learn from experience what events typically occur and are able to modify plans in response to different events.
    Proficient
  66. (Novice to Expert Theory) They no longer rely solely on rules to guide their actions under certain situations. They have an intuitive grasp of the situation based on their deep knowledge and experience.
    Expert
  67. Who was the theorist of The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being?
    Martha E. Rogers
  68. This theory believes on the coexistence of human and the environment has greatly influenced the process of change towards better health.
    The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being
  69. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) Focuses on the people and the manifestation that emerge from the mutual human-environmental field process.
    Nursing
  70. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) Nursing is a _______ and an ____.
    science, art
  71. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) Human beings are considered as united whole
    Wholeness
  72. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) A person and his environment are continuously exchanging energy with each other
    Openness
  73. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) The life process of human being evolves irreversibly and unidirectional i.e. from birth to death
    Unidirectionality
  74. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) Pattern identifies individual and reflects their innovative wholeness
    Pattern and Organization
  75. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) Humans are the only organisms able to think, imagine, have language and emotions
    Sentence and Thoughts
  76. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) The energy that can freely flow between human and environment
    Energy Field
  77. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) There are no boundaries that stop energy flow between the human and environmental fields, which is the ________
    openness
  78. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) the distinguishing characteristic of an energy field seen as a single wave. It is an abstraction, and gives identity to the field
    Pattern and Organization
  79. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) “non-linear domain without spatial or temporal attributes.” Events are arbitrary, and the present is relative; there is no temporal ordering of lives.
    Pandimensionality
  80. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) an ordered arrangement of rhythm characterizing both the human and environmental fields that undergo continuous dynamic metamorphosis in the human environmental process.
    Resonancy
  81. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) Describes the unpredictable, nonlinear evolution of energy fields as seen in non-repeating rhythmicities, and postulates an ordering of the human evolutionary emergency
    Helicy
  82. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) covers the mutual, continuous relationship of the human and environmental fields
    Integrality
  83. The Science of Humanitary Human Being is highly generalizable as the concepts and ideas are not confined with a specific nursing approach unlike the usual way of other nurse theorist in defining the major concepts of a theory. True or False?
    True
  84. Rogers gave much emphasis on how a nurse should view the patient. She developed principles which emphasizes that a nurse should view the client as a _____.
    whole
  85. (The Theory of Science of Unitary Human Being) A patient cannot be separated to his ______ when addressing health and treatment.
    environment
  86. Who was the theorist of Self-care Deficit Model?
    Dorothea Elizabeth Orem
  87. Orem's Self-Care Deficit Model is a general theory composed of three related theories. What are these?
    • 1. Theory of Self-care
    • 2. Theory of Self-care Deficit
    • 3. Theory of Nursing Systems
  88. (Orem's Self-Care Deficit Model) Focuses on the performance or practice of activities that individuals initiate and perform on their own behalf to maintain life, health, and well-being
    Theory of Self-Care
  89. (Orem's Self-Care Deficit Model) Delineates when nursing is needed. It is required when an adult (or in the case of a dependent, the parent or guardian), is incapable of or limited in providing continuous effective self-care.
    Theory of Self-Care Deficit
  90. (Orem's Self-Care Deficit Model) Outlines how the patient's healthcare needs will be met by the nurse, the patient, or both.
    Theory of Nursing Systems
  91. (Orem's Self-Care Deficit Model) enables nurses to assess the deficit of innate self-care abilities of patients, which make them perform their self-care activities.
    Theory of Self-Care Deficit
Author
raine
ID
360346
Card Set
TFN Theory 1-14
Description
Updated