Published Jun 7, 2011
MunoRN, RN
8,058 Posts
'Holistic' Nursing is a term that seems redundant to me, sort of like saying 'invasive open heart surgery' or 'technical engineering' or 'basic fundamentals'. I had always thought that considering all aspects of the patient; physical (all systems), emotional, social, economic, etc was a basic concept of Nursing in general, but I'm discovering maybe I was wrong. Maybe it's just where I went to school and the area I live (which is sort of crunchy) that believes holistic care is part of nursing by it's basic definition. But I had a family member the other day who made me question that. After I turned on the radio in his room overnight to try and get him to settle down, the patient's daughter said "Oh, so you're a holistic nurse, that's great, are you certified?" My first thought was "certififed at what? Certified to turn on a radio?"
So I looked into it and I'm ashamed to admit I had no idea Holistic Nursing was considered a subset of Nursing, or that there was a "Holistic Nurses Association". This makes no sense to me. Is there an "Assessment Nurses Association"? Of course there isn't, assessment is an integral part of Nursing care, just as viewing the patient as a complex, interconnected group of factors that determine their overall health is an integral part of Nursing care. Pretty much every theory, tool, and philosophy we use in nursing is to help us see patients holistically, from Maslow to Orem to Nightengale. One review of all nursing theories summed up nursing with this: "Nursing is concerned with the whole person", i.e. Nursing is holistic.
My first thought was that this was all due to a malaprop, or as Mr. Montoya put it:
That pretty much sums up what I was taught Nursing is, not just nursing for those who choose to specialize in "holistic nursing". So my question is, is this really not a part of Nursing in general? While there are specialty areas in nursing such as wound care or diabetes education, this is not one of this, this is a basic core component of ALL nursing just like the Nursing process or being caring, lets not bastardize it.
queenjulie, RN
161 Posts
I completely agree. Although I am a big proponent of using nutrition, acupuncture, and other alternative treatments instead of pharmacology, using the word "holistic" as a name for that makes no sense. As you said, nursing IS holistic, because nurses, as a rule, see treating the entire patient--even, sometimes, their family!--as a part of their job, not just treating a disease process. I think "holistic nursing" as a specialty should be renamed something like "alternative medicine nursing," "nonpharmacological nursing," or something similar.
BetsyRN1
2 Posts
As a Holistic RN, I'd have to disagree. I went back to get certified in holistic nursing after completing a 2 year course with hands on clinical work. Nursing here in the U.S is not holistic, unlike in the east, which is why I left the hospital. I felt like all we did was push medication. That's definitely not holistic! Holistic by definition means 'treating the body as a whole'. When a patient in the hospital complains of a headache, lets say, we give them pain medication. That simply eliminates the pain...it doesn't look into the cause(s) of the pain. The holistic approach would be to find out what's going on in the body that's triggering this headache, and to treat it without drugs, using acupressure, reiki, essential oils, etc. Unfortunately this does not happen in the hospital setting.
Not_A_Hat_Person, RN
2,900 Posts
Would it not be holistic to treat a headache with accupressure, essential oils, and pain medication? Are drugs and alternative treatments automatically incompatible?