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Introduction to nursing theory: its history, significance, and analysis
History and philosophy of science
Theory development process
The structure of specialized nursing knowledge
Nursing theories of historical significance
Florence Nightingale: modern nursing
Jean Watson: Watson's philosophy and theory of transpersonal caring
Marilyn Ann Ray: theory of bureaucratic caring
Patricia Benner: caring, clinical wisdom, and ethics in nursing practice
Kari Martinsen: philosophy of caring
Katie Eriksson: theory of caritative caring
Myra Estrin Levine: the conservation model
Martha E. Rogers: unitary human beings
Dorothea E. Orem: self-care deficit theory of nursing
Imogene M. King: conceptual system and middle-range theory of goal attainment
Betty Neuman: systems model
Sister Callista Roy: adaptation model
Dorothy E. Johnson: behavioral system model
Anne Boykin and Savina O. Schoenhofer: the theory of nursing as caring: a model for transforming practice
Afaf Ibrahim Meleis: transitions theory
Nola J. Pender: health promotion model
Madeleine M. Leininger: culture care theory of diversity and universality
Margaret A. Newman: health as expanding consciousness
Rosemarie Rizzo Parse: humanbecoming
Helen C. Erickson, Evelyn M. Tomlin, Mary Ann P. Swain: modeling and role-modeling
Gladys L. Husted and James H. Husted: symphonological bioethical theory
Ramona T. Mercer: maternal role attainment-becoming a mother
Merle H. Mishel: uncertainty in illness theory
Pamela G. Reed: self-transcendence theory
Carolyn L. Wiener and Marylin J. Dodd: theory of illness trajectory
Georgene Gaskill Eakes, Mary Lermann Burke, and Margaret A. Hainsworth: theory of chronic sorrow
Phil Barker: the tidal model of mental health recovery
Katharine Kolcaba: theory of comfort
Cheryl Tatano Beck: postpartum depression theory
Kristen M. Swanson: theory of caring
Cornelia M. Ruland and Shirley M. Moore: peaceful end-of-life theory
State of the art and science of nursing theory.
History and philosophy of science
Theory development process
The structure of specialized nursing knowledge
Nursing theories of historical significance
Florence Nightingale: modern nursing
Jean Watson: Watson's philosophy and theory of transpersonal caring
Marilyn Ann Ray: theory of bureaucratic caring
Patricia Benner: caring, clinical wisdom, and ethics in nursing practice
Kari Martinsen: philosophy of caring
Katie Eriksson: theory of caritative caring
Myra Estrin Levine: the conservation model
Martha E. Rogers: unitary human beings
Dorothea E. Orem: self-care deficit theory of nursing
Imogene M. King: conceptual system and middle-range theory of goal attainment
Betty Neuman: systems model
Sister Callista Roy: adaptation model
Dorothy E. Johnson: behavioral system model
Anne Boykin and Savina O. Schoenhofer: the theory of nursing as caring: a model for transforming practice
Afaf Ibrahim Meleis: transitions theory
Nola J. Pender: health promotion model
Madeleine M. Leininger: culture care theory of diversity and universality
Margaret A. Newman: health as expanding consciousness
Rosemarie Rizzo Parse: humanbecoming
Helen C. Erickson, Evelyn M. Tomlin, Mary Ann P. Swain: modeling and role-modeling
Gladys L. Husted and James H. Husted: symphonological bioethical theory
Ramona T. Mercer: maternal role attainment-becoming a mother
Merle H. Mishel: uncertainty in illness theory
Pamela G. Reed: self-transcendence theory
Carolyn L. Wiener and Marylin J. Dodd: theory of illness trajectory
Georgene Gaskill Eakes, Mary Lermann Burke, and Margaret A. Hainsworth: theory of chronic sorrow
Phil Barker: the tidal model of mental health recovery
Katharine Kolcaba: theory of comfort
Cheryl Tatano Beck: postpartum depression theory
Kristen M. Swanson: theory of caring
Cornelia M. Ruland and Shirley M. Moore: peaceful end-of-life theory
State of the art and science of nursing theory.