Personal Nursing Philosophy
Throughout the history of nursing, from its origins in the dressing of ancient battle wounds to the founding of contemporary nursing practices in the 19th century, nursing has always played a significant role in the lives of all people. The care provided by nurses is traditionally related to physical preservation and comfort, thus the nursing position has customarily been connected to humanistic healthcare that nurtures, supports and comforts patients. My personal philosophy of nursing is based on the belief that a human being's personal health and their physical environment are inherently linked, because a person is affected every day by environmental influences, including secondhand smoke, genetically modified food, and poorly made cosmetics. The health of every human being can be seriously affected, both directly and indirectly, by external factors in their own environment. Thus, the nursing care every patient receives should be adapted for that individual, because nursing care is the fundamental tool used to help people reorganize their automatically programmed responses to life situations, so that they can ultimately regain a functional level of health. As Nobel Laureate Richard Schrock said of the subject, "philosophy is an attitude toward life and reality that evolves from each nurse's beliefs" (Edwards, 1997).
Florence Nightingale, who paved the way for modern nursing as we know it today by establishing the first nursing school at St. Thomas' Hospital in 1860, defined nursing in her famous notes on the profession as...
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