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Showing posts with the label nursing knowledge

Is Health a Choice? What are The Social Determinants of Health?

Unfortunately too many people believe that one's health is determined solely by personal choice.  Research supports that this is not the case, but rather, that the social conditions into which one is born into and lives are inextricably connected to how they experience health.  This is not common knowledge but it should be.   Health Is Not Just About Choice The idea that health is solely determined by willpower or lifestyle is comforting because it suggests that everyone starts from the same place and has the same opportunities. But that simply is not true. Canadians do not enter life on a level playing field, and they do not move through it with equal access to income, housing, safety, or opportunity. When someone is working two precarious jobs, struggling to pay rent, or living in overcrowded or unsafe housing, “choosing” to eat well, rest, or exercise is not just hard, it is often impossible. The stress of these conditions does not just feel bad; it literally gets...

Developing a Personal Nursing Philosophy

Formulating and Presenting My Personal Philosophy of Nursing When contemplating a philosophical viewpoint within a particular discipline it is essential to understand its relationship to current issues in the field (DeKeyser & Medoff-Cooper, 2009; Schlotfeldt, 2006). Articulation of a personal nursing philosophy involves contemplation of one’s beliefs, principles and values which direct practice (p. 65, Uys & Smit, 1994 as cited in DeKeyser & Medoff-Cooper, 2009). My personal nursing philosophy began with attempting to answer the questions, “what does nursing mean to me” and “what is guiding my practice”? My philosophy is based on personal reflections, values and beliefs and is connected to the current body of nursing literature; it incorporates my understanding of the traditional nursing metaparadigm that includes person, environment, nursing and health (Monti & Tingen, 2006) and the concept of social justice proposed by Schim, Benkert, Bell, Walker and D...