Nursing practitioners play a critical role in the provision of healthcare in a safe, secure and confidential manner. While they continue to dispense their duties, nurses have to contend with their worldviews on religion, culture, and even spiritual elements that influence their perception and opinion of the practice. Worldview is a set of assumptions, beliefs, and practices that shapes how one perceives the dynamics in any context. Worldview provides nursing practitioners with an ontological foundation on which they base their beliefs. This essay describes my worldview, my nursing philosophy, and the nursing theory that I use to help me in providing health solutions to my patients.
My worldview is largely a factor of my beliefs, cultural practices, religion, assumptions, and spiritual elements. As a nurse, I am aware that these elements can impact the care that I deliver to patients. My religious beliefs and cultural background may impact how I view other people who do not subscribe to the same beliefs. My culture, beliefs, traditions, and religion define how I relate with patients and how these elements distinctly or collectively shape my experience. In the same way, patients have their own sets of beliefs and values based on their cultures that they use to give meaning to their experiences as patients (Thorne, 2020). My worldview encourages me to have a deep understanding of the mindset and mentality of the patients that I treat.
Concerning my nursing philosophy, I have created a statement that clearly outlines the values, beliefs, motivation, and ethics that I observe in dispensing my duties. The statement helps me to focus on the choices that I make and reminds me of the need to observe high ethical standards when attending to patients as espoused by Green (2018). The statement makes me continually ask important questions such as what nursing means to me, the reason for pursuing the nursing profession, my personal beliefs that impact nursing, the skills that are most critical to me in my profession, and what impact my profession has on my community and society. These questions helps me operate in a manner that goes beyond simply adhering to the rules and the laws that govern the nursing practice.
My nursing philosophy is to provide holistic care to my patients and the community. In my view, nursing is about a person and understanding their needs at all levels physically, psychologically, and emotionally (Hoeck & Delmar, 2017). I endeavor to use my skills and technology to provide nursing solutions using evidence-based methods. I use my clinical skills, knowledge, and judgment to empower patients and communities to actively participate in actions and activities designed to improve their health. As a nurse, it is my responsibility and utmost wish to see people transforming their lives by actively participating in matters that bring good health to them. Most importantly, I ensure that patients get the best quality care when in my hands.
While many theories are beneficial to nurses, every nurse identifies with only specific models that work best for them considering their objectives and nursing philosophies. For me, I choose Jean Watson’s Caring theory as my nursing theory. I choose this theory because it offers the best results for patients-care, love, empathy, and quality services. At the same time, this theory appeals to my nursing philosophies. The Jean Watson’s Caring nursing theory has numerous critical advantages to me as a nurse and my patients. For patients, this nursing theory emphasizes quality care, empowerment, creating awareness, cooperation with patients, and meeting the needs of patients (Steyl, 2019). On my side, the Jean Watson’s Caring Theory works well with my nursing philosophy as far as providing a high quality of healing is concerned. Characterizing this theory are such noble concepts as love, kindness, empathy, and positive relationships with patients, elements I endeavor to espouse. Further, the theory adopts a humanistic approach in dealing with patients and supports a comprehensive worldview that enhances the meaning and understanding of knowledge, knowing, doing, and being. This theory helps me to turn my worldviews into positive synergies that are valuable to my patients/customers.
Four months ago I encountered a patient of Hispanic origin who