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HILDEGARD PEPLAU
Hildegard Peplau was born in Reading, Pennsylvania on September 1st, 1909. After graduating from the Pottstown, Pennsylvania Hospital School of Nursing in 1931 she worked as an operating room supervisor at Pottstown Hospital. She later received a B.A. in interpersonal psychology from Bennington College, Vermont, in 1943, an M.A. in psychiatric nursing from Teachers College, Columbia, New York, in 1947, and an Ed.D in curriculum development from Columbia in 1953. During World War II, Hildegard Peplau was a member of the Army Nurse Corps and worked in a neuropsychiatric hospital in London, England. She also did work at Bellevue and Chestnut Lodge Psychiatric Facilities and was in contact with renowned psychiatrists Freida Fromm-Riechman and Harry Stack Sullivan. Hildegard Peplau holds numorous awards and positions. She retired in 1974. On March 17th, 1999, Hildegard Peplau died peacefully at her home in Sherman Oaks California after a brief illness. She was 89 years old
HILDEGARD PEPLAU
(INTERPERSONALRELATIONSHIP and PSYCHODYNAMIC NURSING)
The theory explains the purpose of nursing is to help others identify their felt difficulties.
Nurses should apply principles of human relations to the problems that arise at all levels of experience.
Peplau's theory explains the phases of interpersonal process, roles in nursing situations and methods for studying nursing as an interpersonal process. Nursing is therapeutic in that it is a healing art, assisting an individual who is sick or in need of health care. Nursing is an interpersonal process because it involves interaction between two or more individuals with a common goal.
The attainment of goal is achieved through the use of a series of steps following a series of pattern.
The nurse and patient work together so both become mature and knowledgeable in the process.
Metaparadigm in Nursing
Person: A developing organism that tries to reduce anxiety caused by needs. Environment: Existing forces outside the organism and in the context of culture
Health: A word symbol that implies forward movement of personality and other ongoing human processes in the direction of creative, constructive, productive, personal and community living. Nursing: A significant therapeutic interpersonal process. It functions cooperatively with other human process that make health possible for individuals in communities
ROLES OF NURSES
Stranger: receives the client in the same way one meets a stranger in other life situations provides an accepting climate that builds trust. Teacher: who imparts knowledge in reference to a need or interest
Resource Person : one who provides a specific needed information that aids in the understanding of a problem or new situation
Counselors : helps to understand and integrate the meaning of current life circumstances ,provides guidance and encouragement to make changes Surrogate: helps to clarify domains of dependence interdependence and independence and acts on clients behalf as an advocate.
ADDITIONAL ROLES
1. Technical expert 2. Consultant 3. Health teacher 4. Tutor 5. Socializing agent 6. Safety agent 7. Manager of environment 8. Mediator 9. Administrator 10. Recorder observer 11. Researcher
- The behavior of the nurse as a person interacting with the patient as a person has significant impact on the patients well being and quality and outcome of nursing care.
ORIENTAION PHASE
On admission
IDENTIFICATION PHASE
During
Selection of appropriate professional assistance Patient begins to have a feeling of belonging and a capability of dealing with the problem which decreases the feeling of helplessness and hopelessness
EXPLOITATION/WORKING
Convalescence
and rehabilitation
The principles of interview techniques must be used in order to explore, understand and adequately deal with the underlying problem
RESOLUTION PHASE
Discharge
Now they need to terminate their therapeutic relationship and dissolve the links between them.
Sometimes may be difficult for both as psychological dependence persists Patient drifts away and breaks bond with nurse and healthier emotional balance is demonstrated and both becomes mature individuals
Both are sequential and focus on therapeutic relationship Both use problem solving techniques for the nurse and patient to collaborate on, with the end purpose of meeting the patients needs
Both use observation communication and recording as basic tools utilized by nursin
Assessment Data collection and analysis [continuous] May not be a felt need
Resolution/TERMINATION Occurs after other phases are successfully completed Leads to termination of the relationship
Peplaus theory is significant in terms of the different phases of the nurse-patient interaction and the different roles the nurse can play in giving nursing care to patients. It thus, becomes important for nurses to understand the principles behind each of these concepts so that clinical nursing will be more meaningful for the nurse.
Eventually, this will translate to better patient outcomes like improved health, prevention of disease, and or enhancement of care faculties.