Page 339 - Nursing: The Philosophy and Science of Caring
P. 339
I n de x
Maine, 271 Nurse-Patient Transpersonal Dimension,
Mark, Bendor, Mine Workers, 159(fig.) 6(fig.)
Maryland, 271 Nursing, 40; as calling, 91, 93; conventional,
Massachusetts, 271 108–9; as discipline, 19, 22; education in,
Meaning, and being, 238 245, 250; evidence-based, 110; holistic view
Medical treatment, 228 of, 251–52; outer-world-oriented, 223–24;
Medication, sleeping, 168–69 as task, 209–10. See also Caritas Nursing
Meditation, 59; and pain without suffering, Nursing: Human Science and Human Care, A
236–38; Vipassana, 56–58, 60 Theory of Nursing, 3–4
Meeting, The (Picasso), 70(fig.) Nursing Theory, 112–13
Mental abilities, 219
Mesmer, Franz, 64 Objectivism, objectivity, 20, 247–48; science
Mexico, 272 in, 249–50
Mind-body-spirit, 63, 65, 212 Ohio, 273
Mindfulness, in meditation, 56–58, 59 Oklahoma, 273
Mine Workers (Mark), 159(fig.) Ontological competencies, 22; caring literacy,
Minnesota, 272 24–25; nurse’s role in, 26–27
Miracles, 191, 192, 194 Ontology, of Being-in-Relation, 7
Missouri, 272 Order of Caritas Nurses, 264
Mitchell, Stephen, 80 Originary Primordial Love, 255
Moment-in-the-now, 82–83 Other, 81, 233
Mother Earth, 213
Munch, Edvard, Geschrei, 237(fig.) Pain, without suffering, 236–38
Mutuality, 257; of caring, 151–52 Palmer, Parker, 253, 256, 257; on epistemol-
Mystery, 192 ogy, 249–50, 258; on subjectivity and
Myss, C., 215; Seven-Center Energetic Chakra objectivity, 247–48, 249
System, 209, 211 Panacea, 63
Patients, 282; Caritas Factor Survey, 291,
NANDA. See North American Nursing Diag- 293(n1); in hospital community, 93–95; as
nosis Association objects, 209–10
Nature, 35, 86, 136, 166–67, 169 Peace, 48, 194
Nebraska, 272 People’s Republic of China (PRC), 269
New Hampshire, 272 Permanence, vs. impermanence, 235
New Jersey, 272 Peru, 273
New Mexico, 772 Pew Fetzer Report (PFR) on Relationship-
New York, 272 Centered Care, 88, 93, 95
New Zealand, 273 Pew Fetzer Task Group on Relationship-
NIC, 121 Centered Caring, 88
Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, Thus Spoke Phenomenal field, 5, 79
Zarathustra, 49 Phenomenology, 193
Nightingale, Florence, 86, 227, 255; on com- Philippines, 273, 291, 292
fort measures, 129–30; on clean aesthetic Picasso, Pablo, The Meeting, 70(fig.)
environment, 135–36, 137; ethics, 248–49; Plan of care, activity-inactivity, 161
holistic view of health of, 251–52 Plath, Sylvia, “Tulips,” 108–9
Noetics, 115 Pleureuse, La (Rodin), 105(fig.)
North American Nursing Diagnosis Associa- Portugal, 273
tion (NANDA), 116, 117, 119–20, 121; on Positivism, 20
human dignity, 133–34 Postmodern Nursing and Beyond, 7
North Carolina, 273 Power, personal, 215, 218–19
North Dakota, 273 Practitioners: community relationships,
Norway, 273 91, 93–97; patient relationships, 86–87,
Nurse, ontological competencies of, 26–27 92(table); relationships between, 97–100
311

