| Literature DB >> 30609791 |
Juan Gómez-Salgado1,2, Yolanda Navarro-Abal3, María José López-López4, Macarena Romero-Martín5, José Antonio Climent-Rodríguez6.
Abstract
Nurses are continuously exposed to stressors and psychological and physical risks that can negatively influence their daily work. These adverse psychosocial circumstances, accompanied by the poor self-perception of health, well-being, and quality of life, may trigger burnout. The positive psychology approach pursues a growth of passion at work, increased job satisfaction, and occupational health, both mental and physical, for the optimal performance of the nursing role. In this way, a theoretical analysis was conducted to describe the basic constructs of positive psychology, elements such as engagement, passion at work, centrality, and meaning of work, which could act as protective factors in the nursing profession. The results show that if health professionals are not physically involved, cognitively alert, and emotionally connected, they may not offer the quality care patients require. Positive psychology helps nurses in facing their complex reality and relevant daily activities in order to provide quality care. These efforts towards a humanist nursing care in which professionals are able to care for the others as well as themselves should be made.Entities:
Keywords: care; engagement; meaning of work; nursing; passion; positive psychology
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30609791 PMCID: PMC6338914 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16010108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Concepts flowchart.
Paradigms influencing nursing theories.
| Paradigm | Ideology | Nursing Metaparadigm | Representative Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Categorization | Proposes dividing phenomena into categories or groups exploring the cause of the phenomena. It suggests a bio-medical approach, and a disease/public health orientation. | Environment: it is independent of the person and something that can be controlled and manipulated. | Florence Nightingale, Environmental Theory. |
| Integration | Presents a person’s orientation, acting collaboratively, refusing the passive conception of the patient, and understanding the individual as a bio-psycho-socio-cultural-spiritual being. | Environment: context in which the person lives with positive and negative stimuli and adaptation reactions. | Virginia Henderson, Model of Independence. |
| Transformation | Supposes openness towards the world and the universe where everything is connected. | Environment: universe to which the person belongs. | Jean Watson, Theory of Transpersonal Caring. |