50 Theories in Nursing Practice Study Notes
1. Introduction
Nursing theories provide structured frameworks for guiding practice, education, and research.
They define nursing’s role, patient care approaches, and the relationship between health, environment, and nursing actions.
Theories range from grand theories (broad, abstract) to middle-range theories (specific, testable) and practice theories (narrow, situation-specific).
Understanding multiple theories allows nurses to adapt care to diverse patient needs and contexts.
2. Categories of Nursing Theories
Grand Theories – Broad, abstract frameworks (e.g., Rogers, Roy).
Middle-Range Theories – More specific, testable (e.g., Peplau, Leininger).
Practice Theories – Narrow, situation-specific (e.g., Nightingale’s environmental focus).
3. Overview of 50 Key Nursing Theories
Foundational Theorists
Florence Nightingale – Environmental Theory
Cleanliness, ventilation, light, nutrition affect health.
Hildegard Peplau – Interpersonal Relations Theory
Nurse-patient relationship phases: orientation, identification, exploitation, resolution.
Virginia Henderson – Need Theory
14 basic needs guiding nursing care.
Dorothea Orem – Self-Care Deficit Theory
Nursing helps when patients cannot meet self-care needs.
Sister Callista Roy – Adaptation Model
Patients as adaptive systems responding to stimuli.
Jean Watson – Theory of Human Caring
Caring as essence of nursing; carative factors.
Madeleine Leininger – Transcultural Nursing Theory
Cultural competence and culturally congruent care.
Betty Neuman – Systems Model
Patients as open systems interacting with stressors.
Imogene King – Goal Attainment Theory
Nurse-patient collaboration to achieve health goals.
Martha Rogers – Science of Unitary Human Beings
Patients as energy fields interacting with environment.
Middle-Range & Practice Theories
Patricia Benner – Novice to Expert Theory
Stages of nursing competence.
Katharine Kolcaba – Comfort Theory
Physical, psychospiritual, sociocultural, environmental comfort.
Nola Pender – Health Promotion Model
Promoting healthy behaviors and lifestyle.
Ida Jean Orlando – Nursing Process Theory
Nurse-patient interaction guides care.
Ernestine Wiedenbach – Helping Art of Clinical Nursing
Nursing as helping based on patient needs.
Faye Abdellah – 21 Nursing Problems Theory
Patient-centered approach to nursing problems.
Lydia Hall – Care, Cure, Core Theory
Three aspects: nursing care, medical cure, patient core.
Joyce Travelbee – Human-to-Human Relationship Model
Emphasis on empathy and compassion.
Margaret Newman – Health as Expanding Consciousness
Health as evolving awareness.
Rosemarie Parse – Human Becoming Theory
Focus on quality of life and human dignity.
Systems & Adaptation Theories
Dorothy Johnson – Behavioral System Model
Patients as behavioral systems with subsystems.
Myra Levine – Conservation Model
Conservation of energy, structural integrity, personal integrity, social integrity.
Anne Boykin & Savina Schoenhofer – Nursing as Caring Theory
Caring as central to nursing identity.
Barbara Dossey – Integral Nursing Theory
Holistic, integrative approach to care.
Joanne Duffy – Quality-Caring Model
Relationship-centered care improves outcomes.
Contemporary & Specialized Theories
Afaf Meleis – Transitions Theory
Nursing supports patients during life transitions.
Merle Mishel – Uncertainty in Illness Theory
Coping with uncertainty in health conditions.
Kristen Swanson – Caring Theory
Five caring processes: knowing, being with, doing for, enabling, maintaining belief.
Helen Erickson – Modeling and Role-Modeling Theory
Understanding patient worldview to guide care.
Joanne Riehl-Sisca – Interaction Model of Client Health Behavior
Focus on client interactions and health behaviors.
Additional Influential Theories
Florence Wald – Hospice and Palliative Care Model
Margaret Campbell – End-of-Life Nursing Theory
Pamela Reed – Self-Transcendence Theory
Cheryl Beck – Postpartum Depression Theory
Carolyn Weiner & Marylin Dodd – Symptom Management Theory
E. Zerwekh – Nursing Leadership Theory
Joan Riehl – Communication Theory in Nursing
Helen Yura & Mary Walsh – Nursing Process Framework
Barbara Carper – Fundamental Patterns of Knowing in Nursing
Jacqueline Fawcett – Metaparadigm of Nursing
Anne Casey – Child-Centered Nursing Model
Sarah E. Allison – Nursing Ethics Theory
Kathleen Dracup – Cardiac Nursing Theory
Marilyn McFarland – Cultural Care Diversity
Janet Hardy – Oncology Nursing Theory
Joan Austin – Pediatric Nursing Theory
Mary Jane Smith – Middle-Range Theory Development
Elizabeth Lenz – Theory of Chronic Illness Care
Pamela Minarik – Psychiatric Nursing Theory
Nancy Roper, Winifred Logan, Alison Tierney – Roper-Logan-Tierney Model of Nursing
Focus on activities of daily living.
4. Comparative Insights
Grand theories provide philosophical foundations but can be abstract.
Middle-range theories are practical and research-friendly.
Practice theories are directly applicable to bedside care.
Together, they create a comprehensive toolkit for nursing practice.
5. Application in Nursing Practice
Clinical care: Guides assessment, diagnosis, intervention, and evaluation.
Education: Shapes curricula and teaching strategies.
Research: Provides hypotheses and conceptual frameworks.
Policy: Influences health care standards and regulations.
6. Challenges
Complexity and abstraction of some theories.
Need for cultural adaptation.
Integration with modern technology and interdisciplinary care.
7. Conclusion
Nursing practice is enriched by diverse theories.
Each theory offers unique insights into patient care, nurse roles, and health outcomes.
Mastery of multiple theories ensures holistic, evidence-based, and culturally competent nursing practice.
Quiz (15 Questions)
Multiple Choice
Who is considered the founder of modern nursing?
a) Peplau
b) Nightingale
c) Henderson
d) Watson
Which theorist developed the Self-Care Deficit Theory?
a) Orem
b) Roy
c) Watson
d) Henderson
The Adaptation Model was proposed by:
a) Rogers
b) Roy
c) Neuman
d) King
Which theory emphasizes cultural competence?
a) Leininger’s Transcultural Nursing Theory
b) Watson’s Caring Theory
c) Henderson’s Need Theory
d) Johnson’s Behavioral System Model
Patricia Benner’s theory focuses on:
a) Comfort
b) Novice to Expert development
c) Adaptation
d) Self-care
True/False
Jean Watson’s theory emphasizes caring as the essence of nursing.
Orem’s theory promotes patient autonomy.
Roy’s Adaptation Model views patients as adaptive systems.
Nightingale emphasized psychological adaptation over environmental factors.
Leininger’s theory highlights cultural diversity in care.
Short Answer
List three grand nursing theories.
Why is cultural competence important in nursing practice?
Give one example of how Nightingale’s environmental theory applies today.
What is the difference between grand and middle-range theories?
Explain the significance of Imogene King’s Goal Attainment Theory.