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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper presents biographical information as well as details about her well known Human Becoming Theory. Strengths and weaknesses of the theory are discussed. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA049RRP.doc
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nurses have with their patients. Today, nurse practitioners and physician assistants render the old model where only the primary care physician and patient existed obsolete. Today, a slew of options
are open to nurses. Nursing theory also has taken bold strides. Some nursing theorists--such as Rosemarie Rizzo Parse--has paved the way for new approaches in the philosophy of patient
care. With a focus on the patient, Parse has changed the way medicine is viewed. What is her background and what has she contributed to the field of nursing?
II. Biographical Data Rosemarie Rizzo Parse, RN, PhD, FAAN is currently a professor and Niehoff Chair at Loyola University in Chicago ("Rosemarie," 2000). She is the founder
and editor of the Nursing Science Quarterly as well as the president of Discovery International, Inc., a company that sponsors international nursing theory conferences (2000). Additionally, Parse is the founder
of the Institute of Human Becoming, where she teaches ontological, epistemological, and methodological aspects of that school of thought (2000). Parse has written many books and articles (2000). While
this nurse has contributed much to the field, her accomplishments were seemingly the culmination of a desire to help people throughout her life. Since childhood, it appears that Parse was
interested in the profession and since that time has done a great deal. Not only did she become a nurse, but achieving a doctorate in the field has proven that
she had taken her dream to the limit. Presently, Dr. Parses primary theory is used in practice in health care settings throughout the world including Canada, Finland, South
Korea, Sweden, and the United States ("Rosemarie," 2000). Her research methods have also been utilized in Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and
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