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Thinking upstream: nurturing a conceptual understanding of the societal context of health behavior.

Thinking upstream: nurturing a conceptual understanding of the societal context of health behavior. This article addresses the issue of overreliance on theories that define nursing in terms of a one-to-one relationship at the expense of theoretical perspectives that emphasize the societal context of health. When individuals are perceived as the focus of nursing action, the nurse is likely to propose intervention strategies aimed at either changing the behaviors of the individual or modifying the individual's perceptions of the world. When nurses understand the social, political, and economic influences that shape the health of a society, they are more likely to recognize social action as a nursing role and work on behalf of populations. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png ANS. Advances in nursing science Pubmed

Thinking upstream: nurturing a conceptual understanding of the societal context of health behavior.

ANS. Advances in nursing science , Volume 12 (2): 8 – Mar 6, 1990

Thinking upstream: nurturing a conceptual understanding of the societal context of health behavior.


Abstract

This article addresses the issue of overreliance on theories that define nursing in terms of a one-to-one relationship at the expense of theoretical perspectives that emphasize the societal context of health. When individuals are perceived as the focus of nursing action, the nurse is likely to propose intervention strategies aimed at either changing the behaviors of the individual or modifying the individual's perceptions of the world. When nurses understand the social, political, and economic influences that shape the health of a society, they are more likely to recognize social action as a nursing role and work on behalf of populations.

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ISSN
0161-9268
DOI
10.1097/00012272-199001000-00004
pmid
2105688

Abstract

This article addresses the issue of overreliance on theories that define nursing in terms of a one-to-one relationship at the expense of theoretical perspectives that emphasize the societal context of health. When individuals are perceived as the focus of nursing action, the nurse is likely to propose intervention strategies aimed at either changing the behaviors of the individual or modifying the individual's perceptions of the world. When nurses understand the social, political, and economic influences that shape the health of a society, they are more likely to recognize social action as a nursing role and work on behalf of populations.

Journal

ANS. Advances in nursing sciencePubmed

Published: Mar 6, 1990

There are no references for this article.