1 / 18

HOPE, OPTIMISM, AND RESILIENCY

HOPE, OPTIMISM, AND RESILIENCY. ?. SUCH AN INTEREST IN HOPE. WHY. FROM DEBIT OR DISEASE MODEL. TO POSITIVE CONCEPTS. —”A NATURAL FOR NURSES”. NURSING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH: 20 + YEARS OF HOPE. Buehler (1975) Dufault (1981) Hope in elderly cancer patients Rideout & Montemuro (1986).

mick
Download Presentation

HOPE, OPTIMISM, AND RESILIENCY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HOPE, OPTIMISM, AND RESILIENCY

  2. ? SUCH AN INTEREST IN HOPE WHY

  3. FROM DEBIT OR DISEASE MODEL TO POSITIVE CONCEPTS —”A NATURAL FOR NURSES”

  4. NURSING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH: 20 + YEARS OF HOPE Buehler (1975) Dufault (1981) Hope in elderly cancer patients Rideout & Montemuro (1986)

  5. NURSING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH: 20 + YEARS OF HOPE Farran & McCann (1989)Longitudinal analysis of hope in community–based older adults Farran & Popovich (1990) Hope: A relevant concept for geriatric psychiatry Herth (1990) Level of hope, copying styles, settingto grief resolution in elderly widow(er)s

  6. NURSING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH: 20 + YEARS OF HOPE Fehring et al. (1990)Spiritual well-being, religiosity, hope, depression in elderly people coping with cancer Raleigh (1992) Sources of hope in chronic illness El–Gamel (1993)

  7. NURSING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH: 20 + YEARS OF HOPE Mc Gill & Paul (1993) Functional status and hope in elderly people with and without cancer Byrne et al. (1994) Herth (1995) Engendering hope in the chronically and terminally ill

  8. NURSING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH: 20 + YEARS OF HOPE Fowler (1995) Hope and a health promoting lifestyle in persons with Parkinson’s disease Beckerman & Northrop (1996)Hope, chronic illness, and the elderly Zorn (1997) Factors contributing to hope among noninstitutionalized elderly

  9. NURSING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH: 20 + YEARS OF HOPE Benzein & Saveman (1998) Brandt (1998) Roberts et al. (1999) Fostering hope in the elderly congestive heart failure patient

  10. NURSING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH: 20 + YEARS OF HOPE Cutliffe (2001) Inspiring hope in cognitively impaired older adults Duggleby (2001)Hope at the end of life Bays (2001) Older adults description of hope after a stroke

  11. RESEARCH EMPHASIZING IS OF PARTICULAR IMPORTANCE TO AGING AND NURSING SCIENCE HOPE, OPTIMISM AND RESILIENCE

  12. HOPE A multidimensional dynamic life force characterized by a confident, yet uncertain, expectation of achieving good, which to the hoping person, is realistically possible and personally significant.(Dufault, 1981) Generalized Hope Particularized Hope

  13. OPTIMISM A stable cognitive set reflecting general rather than specific outcome expectancies, a general trait or outlook that includes a person’s overall attitude and approachtoward self and world( Myers; Seligman) A disposition that expects the best possible or emphasizes primarily the positive aspects of a situation(Farran at al, 1995)

  14. OPTIMISM The belief that things will turn out well or that there are good aspects of every situation (sanguine) The belief that good is the dominant force in the universe Similarity with Hope Differences with Hope

  15. RESILIENCE Social and psychological competence characterized by equanimity, perseverance, meaningfulness, existential aloneness, and self–reliance(Wagnild and Young, 1993) The capacity of individuals to cope successfully with significant change, adversity or risk( Stewart and colleagues, 1997)

  16. RESILIENCE A transformational process that results from the connections made with others to move the person through and beyond the stress “into a new and more comprehensive personal and relational integration”(Jordon, 1992) An effect of hope that energizes individuals to move forward in spite of difficulties(Roset, 1999)

  17. NURSES AND OTHER CAREGIVERS AS SOURCES AND THREATS TO HOPE AND HOPING PROCESSES

  18. POLICY CHANGES TO SUPPORT RESEARCH/PRACTICE WITH THIS EMPHASIS

More Related