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Translate WATSONââ¬â¢S THEORY OF HUMAN CARING AND SUBJECTIVE LIVING EXPERIENCES Essay Example for Free
 Translate  WATSONââ¬â¢S THEORY OF HUMAN CARING AND SUBJECTIVE LIVING EXPERIENCES Essay  A TEORIA DO CUIDADO HUMANO DE WATSON E AS EXPERIÃÅ NCIAS SUBJETIVAS DE VIDA: FATORES CARITATIVOS/CARITAS PROCESSES COMO UM GUIA DISCIPLINAR PARA A PRà TICA PROFISSIONAL DE ENFERMAGEM  LA TEORà A DEL CUIDADO HUMANO DE WATSON Y LAS EXPERIENCIAS SUBJETIVAS DE VIDA: FACTORES CARITATIVOS/CARITAS PROCESSES COMO UNA GUà A DISCIPLINAR PARA LA PRà CTICA PROFESIONAL DE ENFERMERà A  Jean Watson2  This manuscript draws upon a previous publication with modifications: Watson J. Carative factors, Caritas processes guide to professional nursing.         Danish Clinical Nursing Journal. 2006; 20 (3): 21-7. 2  PhD, RN, AHN-BC, FAAN. Distinguished Professor of Nursing Murchinson-Scoville Endowed Chair in Caring Science, in the University of Colorado Denver and Health Sciences Center, USA. Web: www.uchsc.edu/nursing/caring 1  KEYWORDS: Teoria de  enfermagem. Prà ¡tica profissional. Cuidados de enfermagem. Enfermagem.  ABSTRACT: This article provides an overview of Watsonââ¬â¢s theory of Human Caring, the notion of Caritas and human phenomena. Special emphasis is placed upon the theoretical structure of human caring theory referred to as 10 Carative Factors/Caritas Processes and subjective living processes and experiences. These core conceptual aspects of the theory and human living processes are grounded within the philosophical and ethical foundation ofà  the body of my caring theory work. Together they serve as a guide for professional practice, as well as a disciplinary blueprint for the Science of Care.  PALAVRAS-CHAVE: Nur- RESUMO: Este artigo fornece uma visà £o geral da teoria de Cuidado Humano de Watson, a noà §Ã £o de Caritas e sing theory. Professional practi- o fenà ´meno humano. Uma à ªnfase especial à © dada sobre os 10 Fatores Caritativos/Caritas Processes, os processos de viver humano e as experià ªncias subjetivas de vida que fazem parte da estrutura da teoria. Estes aspectos ce. Nursing care. Nursing.  centrais dos conceitos da teoria e processos de viver sà £o desenvolvidos na fundamentaà §Ã £o filosà ³fica e à ©tica do corpo da Teoria de Cuidado. Juntos, eles servem como um guia para a prà ¡tica profissional, bem como, um esquema disciplinar para a Cià ªncia do Cuidado.  PALABRAS CLAVE: Teoria  de enfermerà a. Prà ¡ctica profesional. Atencià ³n de enfermerà a. Enfermerà a.  RESUMEN: El presente artà culo ofrece una visià ³n general sobre la teorà a del Cuidado Humano de Watson, la nocià ³n de Caritas y el fenà ³meno humano. En este estudio se da un à ©nfasis especial a los diez factores Caritativos/Caritas Processes, a los procesos del vivir humano y a las experiencias subjetivas de vida, los cuales forman parte de la estructura de la teorà a. Los aspectos centrales de los conceptos de la teorà a y los procesos del vivir son desarrollados en el fundamento filosà ³fico y à ©tico del cuerpo de la teorà a de Cuidado; todos esos aspectos juntos sirven como una guà a para la prà ¡ctica profesional, asà  como tambià ©n un esquema disciplinar para la Ciencia del Cuidado.  Endereà §o: Jean Watson  University of Colorado Denver and Health Sciences Center  80262  Denver, Colorado, USA.  Email: [emailprotected]  Texto Contexto Enferm, Florianà ³polis, 2007 Jan-Mar; 16(1): 129-35.  Artigo original: Reflexà £o teà ³rica  Recebido em: 15 de agosto de 2006.  Aprovaà §Ã £o final: 23 de fevereiro de 2007.   130   INTRODUCTION  The origin of the original theory of humanà  caring was my first book âËâ Nursing: the philosophyà  and science of caring.1 This first work was publishedà  before there was formal attention to nursing theory asà  the disciplinary foundation for nursing science, education, and practice. The origin of the theory of human caring wasà  first work ââ¬Å"emerged from my quest to bring new meaning and dignity to the world of nursing and patient careâ⬠ and to the inner subjective life experiences ofà  self and other.2:49 It also served to provide an ethicalphilosophical foundation for the deeply human dimensions of nursing.  The theoretical concepts were derived andà  emerged from, my personal/professional experiences;à  they were clinically inducted, empirically grounded  and combined with my philosophical, intellectual,  and experiential background.  Thus, the early work  emerged from my own values, beliefs, perceptions and  experiences about rhetorical and ineffable questions,  e.g. what does it mean to be human? What does it  mean to care?  What does it mean to heal? What does  it mean to develop knowledge and practices about life  phenomena and subjective human experiences? What  is a living philosophical context for exploring nursing  and life meaning in health and illness?    Questions and views of personhood, life, death,  change, health, healing, caring, wholeness, pain, suffering, and so on, were  guiding my quest to identify a framework for nursing as a distinct entity, profession,  discipline and science in its own right, separate from,  but complementary to medicine.  1 My views were  heightened by my commitment to the professional role  and mission of nursing; its ethical covenant with society as sustaining human caring; in honoring the lived experience of self and other; in seeking to preserve  humanity, even when threatened; attending to and helping to sustain human dignity, unity of oneness of being, to hold the other in their wholeness, even when they  could not feel whole themselves.  These are all activities  which transcend illness, diagnosis, condition, setting,à  and so on, and are enduring and timeless across time  and space and changes in society and science.à  Since then, the original work has expanded and  evolved through a generation of other theory-basedà  books on caring that followed:   ââ¬Å"Nursing: human science and human care, a theoryofnursingâ⬠.Connecticut(USA):Appleton/Century/ Crofts. Reprinted/republished, New York (NY/USA):  Watson J  National League for Nursing; 1988. Reprinted/republished, Massachusetts (USA): Jones  Bartlett; 1999.3  ââ¬Å"Postmodern sursing and seyondâ⬠. Edinburgh  (Scotland): Churchill-Livingstone. Reprinted/republished, Harcourt-Brace/Elsevier; 1999.4  ââ¬Å"Caring science as sacred scienceâ⬠. Philadelphia  (USA): FA Davis; 2005.5  The first book ââ¬Å"Nursing: the philosophy andscience of caringâ⬠1 provided the original core and  structure for the Theory of Human Caring: 10 Carative  Factors. These factors were identified as the essential  aspects of caring in nursing, without which perhaps  nurses were not practicing professional nursing, but  were functioning as technicians or skilled workers  within the dominant framework of medical technocure science. The second book ââ¬Å"Nursing: human science and human care, a theory of nursingâ⬠3 expanded upon the philosophical, transpersonal aspects of a  caring moment as the core framework; this focus placed  the ideas more explicitly within a broader context of  ethics, art and even metaphysics-spiritual, as deeper living phenomena within which nursing dwells, but often does not name, nor articulate, nor act on.    As it has been pointed out in postmodern discourse today; ââ¬Å"if a profession does not have its own language it does not existâ⬠, thus it is important to name, claim, articulate and act upon the phenomena of nursing  and caring and the subjectively real living experiences of  self and other; this focus for nursing and caring science  is essential if nursing is to fulfill its mandate and raison dââ¬â¢Ã ªtre for existing in science and society. This work makes more explicit that if nursing is to survive into this millennium then it has to sustain and make explicit its covenant with the public which includes knowledge, values, ethics  and skilled practices of caring, healing, health, and living phenomena of human experiences.  Thethirdbookââ¬Å"Postmodernnursingandbeyondâ⬠4  brought a focus to the professional paradigm which is  grounded in ontology of relations and an ethical-ontological foundation before the conventional epistemology of science and technology.  The need to clarify the ontological  foundation of Being-in-Relation within a Caring paradigm; the unity of mindbodyspirit/field was the focus of this work, going beyond the outdated separatist ontology  of modern, Era I medical industrial thinking.  It is here in this book that the spiritual and  evolved energetic aspects of caring consciousness and  intentionality and human presence and personal evolution of the practitioner became more developed.  This evolution was placed within the emerging post ââ¬âmodern  Texto Contexto Enferm, Florianà ³polis, 2007 Jan-Mar; 16(1): 129-35.  Watsonââ¬â¢s theory of human caring and subjective living experiences   131   cosmology of healing, wholeness, oneness which is an  honoring of the unity of all, and the living experiences  and life phenomena in which nursing dwells.  My most recent theoretical book ââ¬Å"Caring science as sacred scienceâ⬠5 was selected as an AJN Book of the Year Award (2006) in the category of research;  it expands further upon the original work on caring,  now placing Caring Science within an ethical-moralphilosophical âËâ evolved scientific context, guided by the works of Emmanual Levinas (French)6 and  Knud Logstrup (Danish).  7 This latest work seeks a  science model that reintegrates metaphysics with the  physical domain, and re-invites Ethics-of ââ¬âBelonging,  (to infinite field of Universal Cosmic Love) as before  and underneath Being-by-Itself alone; this view is  different, and separate from, the broader universal  field of infinity, to which we all belong and return to  from earth plane.  This latest work brings a decidedly  sacred dimension to the work of caring, making more  explicit that living human experiences are a phenomena with spiritual and philosophical-ethical-moral dimensions; reminding us that we dwell in mystery.  We dwell in mystery because we are working with  the living processes, the life force, life energy, the  soul if you will of another person.    This focus makes more explicit that relational,  existential-spiritual human caring dimensions and  the deeply life processes, the deeper meaning of life  are part of the inner healing journey we make with  self and others on this earth plane passage; this happens when we are practicing within a caring-healing model. When we are conscious of an expanded cosmology and expanded deeper moral-ethical  foundation as the nature of caring and human living  processes, we have to arrive at a new understanding and humility. We are asked to acknowledge a need for wisdom, even to surrender, to that which  is greater than Self, and the outer world controls,  that often we think we have.    With that background of my major books on  Caring theory, Philosophy, and Caring Science the  rest of this paper will explicate several of the conceptual aspects of the work; the core of the original work in context of its evolution; outlining the 10  Carative Factors (CF).  DEVELOPMENT  The Caritas Processes (CP) are juxtaposed against  the original Carative Factors. The Caritas Processes are  an extension of the other which have evolved; CP are  intended to offer a more fluid language for understanding a deeper level of CF which capture the deeper dimensions of living processes of human experiences.    The original terms and concepts of the Carative Factors needed to evolve as they seemed too set in the language of the earlier era, although still relevant.  Nevertheless, in this article, I am using the two  forms almost interchangeable. However, Caritas makes  more explicit the connection between Caring and  Love and human living processes.  These aspects are  more prominent in my last book on caring science.5  Some exemplars of how the work in used as a  guide to transforming practices within the context  of living processes are included in Box 1.  Box 1 ââ¬â 10 Carative factors and caritas processes.  Original 10 Carative Factors, juxtaposed  against the emerging Caritas Processes/  Carative Factors  Caritas Processes  1. Humanistic ââ¬âAltruistic Values.  1. Practicing Loving-kindness  Equanimity for self and other.  2. Instilling/enabling Faith  Hope.  2. Being authentically present to/enabling/sustaining/honoring deep belief system and subjective world of self/other.  3. Cultivation of Sensitivity to oneââ¬â¢s self and other.  3. Cultivating of oneââ¬â¢s own spiritual practices; deepening selfawareness, going beyond ââ¬Å"ego selfâ⬠.  4. Development of helping-trusting, human  caring relationship.  4. Developing and sustaining a helping-trusting, authentic  caring relationship.  5. Promotion and acceptance of expression of  positive and negative feelings.  5. Being present to, and supportive of, the expression of  positive and negative feelings as a connection with deeper  spirit of self and the one-being-cared-for.  6. Systematic use of scientific (creative) problemsolving caring process.  6. Creatively using presence of self and all ways of knowing/ multiple ways of Being/doing as part of the caring process;  engaging in artistry of caring-healing practices.  Texto Contexto Enferm, Florianà ³polis, 2007 Jan-Mar; 16(1): 129-35.   132   7. Promotion of transpersonal teaching-learning.  8. Provision for a supportive, protective, and/or  corrective mental, social, spiritual environment.  9. Assistance with gratification of human needs.  10. Allowance for existential-phenomenological  spiritual dimensions.  Watson J  7. Engaging in genuine teaching-learning experiences that  attend to whole person, their meaning; attempting to stay  within otherââ¬â¢s frame of reference.  8. Creating healing environment at all levels (physical, nonphysical, subtle environment of energy and consciousness whereby wholeness, beauty, comfort, dignity and peace are  potentiated.  9. Assisting with basic needs, with an intentional, caring  consciousness of touching and working with embodied spirit  of individual, honoring unity of Being; allowing for spiritual emergence.  10. Opening and attending to spiritual-mysterious, unknown  existential dimensions of life-death; attending to soul care for self and one- being- cared- for.  These 10 original Carative Factors remain as  the timeless structural core of the Theory, while  allowing for their evolving and emergence into  more fluid aspects of the model captured by the 10  Caritas Processes.  In introducing the original concepts of Carative Factors as core for a nursing philosophy and science, I was offering a theoretical counterpoint  to notion of Curative so dominant in medical science. Thus, the Carative Factors helped to define a framework to hold the discipline and professionà  of nursing; they were informed by a deeper vision  and ethical commitment to the human dimensions /living processes of caring in nursing; the art and human science context. I was seeking toà  address those aspects of professional nursing that  transcended medical diagnosis, disease, setting,à  limited and changing knowledge and technology of  specialized foci. What remains as core?  10 Carative  Factors (embellished by philosophical-ethic and  value of Caritas consciousness).  In moving from the concept of Carative, to  Caritas I was making an overt evocation of love  and caring to merge for an expanded paradigm to  connect with the existential-spiritual dimensions  and living processes of human experiences.  Such  a perspective ironically places nursing in its most  mature paradigm, while reconnecting with heritage  and foundation of Nightingale which is the spiritual  living processes of our humanity.    With Caritas incorporated more explicitly  into my work, it locates the theory within an ethical  and ontological contact as starting point for considering not only its science, but its societal human caring mission. This direction makes a more formal  connection between caring and healing and the  evolved human consciousness of living subjective  experiences and life phenomena. The background  for this work is published on my website. See www.  uchsc.edu/nursing/caring for more information.8  CONTEXT FOR CARATIVE/CARITAS  PROCESSES  The Carative Factors/Caritas Processes are  not complete without acknowledging the worldview and philosophical context which holds the concepts. For example: a cosmology of oneness ofà  Being; phenomenal field which honors the subjective-intersubjective inner life world, transpersonal caring relationship, caring occasion and caring  moment.  These wider dimensions serve to remind  that any nurse ââ¬â patient encounter can be considered a caring occasion wherein a ââ¬Å"caring momentâ⬠ can be created and experienced, depending uponà  the consciousness, intentionality, and philosophical (theoretical) orientation which is guiding the nurse.2 A caring moment transcends time and space  and continues as part of larger complex pattern ofà  life of both nurse and patient.  Narrative related to Ten Carative Factors1  Humanistic: altruistic system of values  Caring is grounded on a set of universal  humanistic altruistic values.  Humanistic values  include kindness, empathy, concern, and love for  self and others. They derive from childhood experiences and are enhanced by beliefs, cultures and art. Altruistic values arise from commitments to and  satisfaction from receiving through giving.  They  bring meaning to oneââ¬â¢s life through oneââ¬â¢s belief and  relationships with other people. Humanistic-altruistic feelings and acts provide the basis of human Texto Contexto Enferm, Florianà ³polis, 2007 Jan-Mar; 16(1): 129-35.  Watsonââ¬â¢s theory of human caring and subjective living experiences   133   caring and promote the best professional care, and  as such, constitute the first and most basic factor  for science and ethic of caring.  Developing helping: trusting, caring relationship  The human caring relationship is transpersonal.  in that it connotes a special kind of relationship: a  connection with the other person, a high regard for  the whole person and their Being-in-the-world.  In the  transpersonal human caring relationship, the nurse enters into the experience of another person, and another can enter into the nurseââ¬â¢s experiences. It is an ideal ofà  intersubjectivity in which both persons are involved.à  It is an art in which the nurse forms a union with theà  other, connecting with the spirit-filled person, behindà  the patient, that transcends the physical. This connection honors the upmost concern for human dignity and preservation of humanity.  Enabling and sustaining faith and hope  The history of medicine is replete with documentation of the importance of a personââ¬â¢s belief in faith and hope. For example, Hippocrates thought  that an ill personââ¬â¢s mind and soul should be inspired  before oneââ¬â¢s illness was treated.  IN many other  examples, medicine itself was secondary to magic,  incantations, spells, and prayers. In this Carative  Factor, patientââ¬â¢s beliefs are encouraged, honored  and respected as significant influences in promoting and maintaining health.  Regardless of what scientific regimen is required for medical care of a  person, the nurse should nurture faith and hope and  the deep belief system of the one-being- cared for.  Even when there is nothing left to do medically,  the nurse nurtures a patientââ¬â¢s faith and hope in  something or someone beyond his or her self.  Sensitivity to self and other  To be human is to feel.  All too often people  allow themselves to think their thoughts, but not  feel their feelings. The only way to develop sensitivity to oneââ¬â¢s self and to others is to recognize and feel oneââ¬â¢s feelings.  The development of self and the nurturing  of judgment, taste, values, and sensitivity in human relationships evolve from emotional states.  The development of feeling is encouraged by the  humanities and compassionate life experiences.  Sensitivity to self is the recognition and acknowledgement of feelings ââ¬â painful as well as happy ones. It is cultivated by looking into oneself and a  willingness to explore oneââ¬â¢s own feelings.  People  who are not sensitive to and repress their own feelings may be unable to allow others to express and explore their feelings. Sensitivity to self not only  leads to self-acceptance and psychological growth,  but to sensitivity and acceptance of others.  Nurses who are sensitive to others are better  able to learn about anotherââ¬â¢s view of the world  which, subsequently, increases concern for othersââ¬â¢ comfort, recovery, and wellness. Nurses who recognize and use their sensitivity promote selfdevelopment and self-actualization, and are able to encourage the same growth in others. Without this  factor nursing care would fall.  Texto Contexto Enferm, Florianà ³polis, 2007 Jan-Mar; 16(1): 129-35.  Promoting and accepting the expression of  positive and negative feelings and emotions  Because feelings after thoughts, behavior, and  experiences, they need to need to be acknowledged  and considered in the human caring process.  A  focus on feelings and the ââ¬Å"non-rationalâ⬠ emotional aspects of an event is necessary for nurses engaged in the human caring process. The caring  relationship can move to a deeper, more honest  and authentic level if he nurse allows for this CF.  Further, in listening to and honoring another  personââ¬â¢s feelings we honor their story which holds  meaning and importance for them and their healing. By listening to another personââ¬â¢s story, it may be the greatest healing act we can offer.  It may be  the nurse who is the only one who listens to andà  honors anotherââ¬â¢s story and all the magnitude ofà  feelings that accompany it.à  Engaging in creative, individualized, problemsolving caring process Professional nursing employs the nursingà  process, which is a creative, problem-solvingà  method to assist with decision ââ¬âmaking in all nursing situations. A creative approach acknowledges that nurses use all ways of know/being/doing inà  engaging in clinical caring. Nursing problems solving in not a linear one to one process, but often the nurse walks into a patientââ¬â¢s room and graspsà  the ââ¬Å"gestaltââ¬â¢ ââ¬â reading the field, in the instant.    This process involves full use of self and all of  oneââ¬â¢s faculties, knowledge, instincts, intuition,  aesthetics, technology, skills, empirics, ethics,  personal and even spiritual knowing. In a caring  science model for practice, all knowledge is valu-   134   able and accessed for clinical caring. The process  invites creative imagination as well as systematic  scientific logic and technology.  Transpersonal Teaching-Learning  Nurses have a long history about the educational-teaching role; however there has been more emphasis on conveying information rather than  a conscious intentionality to engage in authentic  processes and relationships of mutuality and reciprocity, in that the nurse seeks to work from the patientââ¬â¢s frame of reference, grasping the meaning  and significance of the information for the person,  as well as the readiness and timeliness for the person  to receive the information.  This CF makes explicit  that learning is more than just receiving information and data. It involves a caring relationship as context for any teaching learning. This CF evolves  toward more of a coaching role in which the person  becomes their own best teacher, in contrast to a  conventional imparting- of- information role.  Provision of supportive, protective, and/or corrective mental, physical, societal, and spiritual environment  The purpose of providing such an environment is quality care and also healing/wholeness.  The areas that involve this factor are: comfort;  privacy; safety; clean; aesthetic surroundings.  Nurses often have a great deal of control ofà  the environment, but without a consciousness of  their obligations to take systematical responsibility  for the environment to protect, support and/or  correct the patient.  More recently this factor has taken on entirely  new meaning. In addition to acknowledging the environment as a functional, physical place to attend to in conventional way, one now is invited to considerà  the nurse as influencing the patterns ââ¬â for example,à  using theory as guide to environment one can thinkà  of the nurse as repatterning the environment toà  promote healing, harmony, and use of caring-healing modalities to assist in patterning a more healing environment; e.g. imagery, visualization, relaxation,à  music-sound, intentional touch, art and so forth.9,5  An even more expanded view of environment developed by Quinn9 and expanded by Watson5 suggests and invites us to consider the nurse as the environment. In this evolved framework we are invited to  Watson J  consider the practitioner and his/her evolved caring  consciousness, presence, intentionality, and so forth,  as the critical ingredient in the environment.5  In this view, then we have to turn toward  the practitioner and the Nurse Self as an energetic,  vibrational field, integral with the patient and outer  environment.  This is a unitary, caring science view  of environment and raises new questions inspired  by Quinn,9 for Caring Science Environment.5:94   If I am the environment, how can I Be a more  caring-healing environment?   How can I Become a safe space, a sacred  vessel for this patient and his/her inner healing  journey?   In what ways can I look at, into this person  (how am I to face this other) to draw out healing/  wholeness?   How can I use my consciousness, my Being,  my presence, my voice, my touch, my face, my  hands, my heart for healing?    Environment now takes on entirely different  meaning with this evolved view, moving beyond  physical environment, and having to pay attention  to the nurse and his/her caring consciousness affecting the entire field. Assisting with gratification of Basic Human Needs,  while preserving human dignity and wholeness  Assistance with anotherââ¬â¢s basic needs gives  nurses access to the physical body in a very intimate  way. As such it is a privilege and great gift to society  to take care of others when in need of care. In a Caring Science model it is acknowledged that the nurse however is not just touching oneââ¬â¢ physical body orà  meeting physical needs, but noting that when touching another we are not touching just the body, but embodied spirit. It is also made explicit in thisà  work that all needs are unified and interdependent;  all needs are equally important and must be valuedà  and responded to for caring-healing.  Allowing for, being open to, existential-phenomenological and spiritual dimensions of caring and healing  This last CF brings up the phenomenon ofà  the unknowns, which cannot be explained scientifically, through the Western mind of modern medicine. This CF allows for mystery and philosophical, Texto Contexto Enferm, Florianà ³polis, 2007 Jan-Mar; 16(1): 129-35.  Watsonââ¬â¢s theory of human caring and subjective living experiences  metaphysical aspects of human experiences and  phenomena which do not conform to conventional  views of science and rational thinking. Nevertheless  these unknowns are real to those affected. This CF  allows for spiritual filled meanings and unknowns  to emerge open to infinite possibilities for miracles.  This CF honors spirit- filled meanings, cultural beliefs, myths, and metaphors and inner subjective life world of nurse and patients and families, allowing  cures and miraculous cures and healings.  CONCLUSION  Finally this framework for Caring Science  and practices proposes that nursing, individually  and collectively, contributes to the preservation of  humanity and seeks to sustain caring in instances  where it is threatened. The Carative Factors/  Caritas Processes serve as structure and order for  a theoretical âËâ philosophical foundation for the  discipline and profession of nursing. The moral  ideals and caring factors and processes proposed  foster the evolution and deepening of humankind  and serve to sustain humanity.  Texto Contexto Enferm, Florianà ³polis, 2007 Jan-Mar; 16(1): 129-35.   135   REFERENCES  1 Watson J. Nursing: the philosophy and science of  caring. Boston (USA): Little Brown; 1979. Boulder  (Colorado/USA): Colorado Associated University  Press; reprinted 1985.  2 Watson J, The theory of human caring: retrospective  and prospective. Nursing Science Quarterly. 1997  Mar; 10 (1): 49-52.    3 Watson J. Nursing human science and human care:  a theory of nursing. Connecticut (USA): AppletonCentury Crofts; 1985. New York (USA): National League for Nursing; reprinted 1988. Massachusetts  (USA): Jones and Bartlett; reprinted 1999.    4 Watson J. Postmodern nursing and beyond. Edinburgh  (Scotland):Churchill-Livingstone.NewYork(NY/USA):  Harcourt-Brace/Elsevier; reprinted 1999.  5 Watson J. Caring science as sacred science. Philadelphia  (USA): FA Davis; 2005.    6 Levinas E. Totality  infinity. Pittsburgh (PA): Duquesne University; 1969.  7 Logstrup K. The ethical demand. Notre Dame (Indiana/  USA): University of Notre Dame; 1997.  8 Watson J. Theory of human caring [acesso em 2006 Nov  11].Disponà velem:http://www.uchsc.edu/nursing/caring  9 Quinn J. Holding sacred space: the nurse as healing  environment.HolisticNursingPractice1992Apr;6(4):26-35.    
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