Nursing Theories
Nursing Theories
Welcome to Week 2. This week we will study grand nursing theories.
Grand nursing theories are the most complicated and largest in scope; they were
developed to comprehensively describe or explain the discipline. Grand nursing theories
have the tendency to be nonspecific. The concepts are abstract and lack operational
definitions. They date back to the writings of Florence Nightingale and attempt to
describe, explain, predict, and, in some cases, prescribe actions that should be taken by
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nurses on behalf of patients. The number of grand nursing theories is significant, and
many of the early grand nursing theorists initially developed their works in the 1950s,
1960s, and 1970s. Nursing Theories
Although there is considerable discussion as to whether grand nursing theories
are relevant in today’s health care system, their contribution to the discipline and
science of nursing is evident. Professional nurses should have a working knowledge of
some of the major grand nursing theorists. Indeed, in addition to Nightingale, theorists
such as Virginia Henderson, Dorothea Orem, Callista Roy, and Martha Rogers have
contributed enormously to the development and recognition of nursing as an academic
discipline and as a profession. Nursing Theories