Nursing Files
Theories
Human becoming
Parse's Theory of nursing
INTRODUCTION
- The Parse theory of human becoming
guides nurses In their practice to focus on quality of life as it is
described and lived (Karen & Melnechenko, 1995).
- The human becoming theory of
nursing presents an alternative to both the conventional bio-medical approach
and the bio-psycho-social-spiritual (but still normative) approach of most
other theories of nursing.(ICPS)
- The human becoming theory posits
quality of life from each person's own perspective as the goal of nursing
practice.(ICPS)
- Rosemarie Rizzo Parse first
published the theory in 1981 as the "Man-living-health" theory
(ICPS)
- The name was officially changed to
"the human becoming theory" in 1992 to remove the term
"man," after the change in the dictionary definition of the word
from its former meaning of "humankind."
ABOUT THE THEORIST
- Educated at Duquesne University,
Pittsburgh
- MSN and Ph.D. from University of
Pittsburgh
- Published her theory of
nursing, Man-Living-Health in 1981
- Name changed to Theory of
Human Becoming in 1992
- Editor and Founder, Nursing
Science Quarterly
- Has published eight books and
hundreds of articles about Human Becoming Theory
- Professor and Niehoff Chair at
Loyola University, Chicago
THEORY DEVELOPMENT
- The human becoming theory was
developed as a human science nursing theory in the tradition of Dilthey,
Heidegger, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, and Gadamer and Science of Unitary Human
Beings by Martha Rogers .
- The assumptions underpinning the
theory were synthesized from works by the European philosophers,
Heidegger, Sartre, and Merleau-Ponty, along with works by the pioneer
American nurse theorist, Martha Rogers.
- The theory is structured around
three abiding themes: meaning, rhythmicity, and transcendence.
ASSUMPTIONS
About man
- The human is coexisting while
coconstituting rhythmical patterns with the universe.
- The human is open, freely choosing
meaning in situation, bearing responsibility for decisions.
- The human is unitary, continuously
coconstituting patterns of relating.
- The human is transcending
multidimensionally with the possibles
About Becoming
- Becoming is unitary
human-living-health.
- Becoming is a rhythmically
coconstituting human-universe process.
- Becoming is the human’s patterns
of relating value priorities.
- Becoming is an intersubjective
process of transcending with the possibles.
- Becoming is unitary human’s
emerging
Three Major Assumptions of Human
Becoming
- Meaning
- Human Becoming is freely choosing
personal meaning in situations in the intersubjective process of living
value priorities.
- Man’s reality is given meaning
through lived experiences
- Man and environment cocreate
- Rhythmicity
- Human Becoming is cocreating
rhythmical patterns of relating in mutual process with the universe.
- Man and environment cocreate (
imaging, valuing, languaging) in rhythmical patterns
- Transcendence
- Human Becoming is cotranscending
multidimensionally with emerging possibles.
- Refers to reaching out and beyond
the limits that a person sets
- One constantly transforms
SUMMARY OF THE THEORY
- Human Becoming Theory includes
Totality Paradigm
- Man is a combination of
biological, psychological, sociological and spiritual factors
- Simultaneity Paradigm
- Man is a unitary being in
continuous, mutual interaction with environment
- Originally Man-Living-Health
Theory
NURSING PARADIGMS AND PARSE'S THEORY
- Open being who is more than and
different from the sum of the parts
- Environment
- Everything in the person and his
experiences
- Inseparable, complimentary to and
evolving with
- Health
- Open process of being and
becoming. Involves synthesis of values
- Nursing
- A human science and art that uses
an abstract body of knowledge to serve people
SYMBOL OF HUMAN BECOMING THEORY
- Black and white = opposite paradox significant to
ontology of human becoming and green is hope
- Center joined =co created mutual human universe process
at the ontological level & nurse-person process
- Green and black swirls intertwining = human-universe co
creation as an ongoing process of becoming
STRENGTH AND
WEAKNESSES
Strengths
- Differentiates nursing from other disciplines
- Practice - Provides guidelines of care and useful
administration
- Useful in Education
- Provides research methodologies
- Provides framework to guide inquiry of other theories
(grief, hope, laughter, etc.)
Weaknesses
- Research considered to be in a “closed circle”
- Rarely quantifiable results - Difficult to compare to
other research studies, no control group, standardized questions, etc.
- Does not utilized the nursing process/diagnoses
- Negates the idea that each person engages in a unique
lived experience
- Not accessible to the novice nurse
- Not applicable to acute, emergent care
APPLICATION OF
THE THEORY
Nursing Practice
- A transformative approach to all levels of nursing
- Differs from the traditional nursing process,
particularly in that it does not seek to “fix” problems
- Ability to see patients perspective allows nurse to “be
with” patient and guide them toward desired health outcomes
- Nurse-person relationship cocreates changing health patterns
Research
- Enhances understanding of human lived experience,
health, quality of life and quality of nursing practice
- Expands the theory of human becoming
- Builds new nursing knowledge about universal lived
experiences which may ultimately contribute to health and quality of life
CRITIQUE
- Congruence with personal values
- Nurse must subscribe to this world view to truly use
it
- Congruence with other professional values
- Complements and competes with other health care
professionals’ values
- Exoteric foundations
- Esoteric utility
- Congruence with social values
- Fulfills society’s expectations of nursing role
- Social Significance
- Makes a substantial difference in the lives of clients
and nurses
RESEARCH ON
PARSE'S THEORY
1. Nursing
practice in human becoming: the "Parse nurse" in French Switzerland
2. The
lived experience of suffering: a parse research method study
3. On
joy-sorrow: a paradoxical pattern of human becoming
4. Human
becoming criticism--a critique of Florczak's study on the lived experience of
sacrificing something important
5. A
Human Becoming perspective on quality of life
6. Feeling
respected: a Parse method study
REFERENCES
1. Karen L. Melnechenko. Parse's Theory
of Human Becoming: An Alternative Guide to Nursing Practice for Pediatric
Oncology Nurses. Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing, Vol. 12, No. 3, 122-127
(1995)
2. ICPS-International Consortium of
Parse Scholars website
THANK YOU