For most of her patients, the day would seem to drag along despite the fact that their rehabilitation sessions were relatively short. Her conclusion was that these patients had an altered sense of reality. This eventually sparked her theory of Health as Expanding Consciousness (HEC).
Looking at the practice of nursing through a more metaphysical lens, the HEC posits that there is a universal and expanding consciousness in which all humans participate -- the healthy, the recuperating, and the incurably ill. Newman believed this was a natural law just as real as the law of gravity -- an unseen energy system that is constantly and unceasingly interacting with everyone and everything in nature (Vandemark, 2008). For Newman, nursing is, at its core, a process of recognition of where patients are in their consciousness, evidenced by the patterns they demonstrate (Neill, 2002). Nurses must be able to identify where a patient is on the continuum of consciousness in relation to their physical environment. If attuned and creative, nurses are better able to help patients elevate their consciousness level to improve their health and abilities. In other words, nurses can use HEC to meet patients where they are, helping them use their personal power to overcome injury or disease through recovery or prevention.
There are strengths and weaknesses to Newman's HEC theory. It is strong in that it embeds a sense of caring and consideration for the patient into nursing inventions (Weingourt, 2008). Patients are viewed in a very holistic way that extends beyond their physical capabilities or limitations. Because of this, HEC can be considered applicable to nearly any health setting and for nearly every demographic. Critics, however, point out that the theory is very abstract (Vandemark, 2008). There are those who do not subscribe to metaphysics. For them, many of Newman's ideas fall flat. In addition, understanding and knowing when or how to interject caring into practice can be confusing. Much of Newman's ideas are purely qualitative. This means that the application of expanded consciousness is subjective depending on the nurse administering the treatment (Neill, 2002). This means that outcomes may not be consistent across the board. This is confounded even further when you consider that patient environments and willingness to participate will also vary. Nurses must understand HEC at a very deep level -- beyond isolated concepts -- to realize its full benefits.
James Fowler -- Faith Development
James Fowler's ideas regarding faith development have been highly examined, debated, and critiqued for nearly twenty years (James, 1997). The faith development theory and its associated stages expand the notion of what faith is. According to Fowler, all humans believe in something or someone (2004). The core of this belief is not religious; rather it is the way we make meaning of the world in which we live -- a way of thinking and being and understanding reality (Jones, 2004). As Fowler himself describes faith, it is:
…the composing or interpreting of an ultimate environment and as a way-of being in-relation to it. [it] must be seen as a central aspect of a person's life orientation. Faith is a primary motivating power in the journey of the self. It plays a central role in shaping the responses a person will make in and against the force-field of his or her life. Faith, then, is a core element in one's character or personality (2004).
For Fowler, faith is acknowledged as simple influential power -- a life-directing idea that guides us. He argues that the way people regard faith is through six distinct stages. Each is guided by specific ways of being. Progression between the stages often results in trauma or internal conflict as people leave the familiar, alter their patterns of thinking, relating and discerning the world and settle into new ways of experiencing life (Fowler, 2004).
Stage 1 is considered the Intuitive-Projective stage and is most common in small children. It is the stage at which basic thought forms about God are created based on lessons from parents or society at large (James, 1997). Stage 2 is referred to as Mythic-Literal and involves recognition of broader...
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