Nursing policies are based on and affected by broadly implementable phenomena and policies. Fundamental theories for many nursing concepts are followed:
- General system policy: It explains how to dissociate a whole entity into parts and later on to learn interactions of these parts in “systems.” it can be implied, such as cultures in sociology, molecules in chemistry, organ interaction in anatomy, and nursing healthcare.
- Adaptation policy: This policy defines adaptation as living organisms’ adjustment according to living things and the environment. However, adoption is a gradual process of change that explains how changes are being affected and what response is attained. Human adaptations are signified on three different levels: social, internal, and physical, e.g., biochemical processes.
- Developmental policy: It summarizes the growth and developmental process of human beings in order and anticipation, commencing with conception and lasting with death. The development and activities of an individual in every stage are inimitable.
The Significance of Nursing Policy
Nursing policies are so critical that they help to describe, prognosticate, and explain the phenomenon practiced. It must be efficient enough to offer a basis for nurse practice, increase information on phenomena, and specify further needed knowledge. However, it should also specify what particular practice is performed in the musing practice of a specific phenomenon. It can result in better patient care, improved communication between nurses and patients, and augmented professional nursing status. It also defines how nurses should take care of patients and also improve knowledge of nursing as medicine in multidisciplinary healthcare.
Four concepts are standard in all of the nursing policies that affect and regulate the nursing practice, i.e., the person (usually a patient), environment, health, and nursing (goal line, roles, occupations). Every concept is stereotypically defined and pronounced by nursing theorists, and every so often exclusively, while ideas are shared by all nursing theories. Among these four concepts, the person is the most important concept. It is the central point of nursing theory or practice.
References
Redman, e. (2011). The dance of legislation: an insider’s account of the workings of the United States Senate. University of Washington Press.
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