Health & Illness
Health & Illness
Health & Illness
Definition of Terms:
Health - process through which the person seeks to maintain an equilibrium that
promotes stability and comfort; includes physiological, psychological,
sociocultural, intellectual and spiritual well-being.
CLINICAL MODEL
- In this model the opposite of health is disease or injury. Many medical practitioners use
the clinical model in their focus on the relief of signs and symptoms of disease and elimination
of malfunction and pain. When these signs and symptoms are no longer present, the medical
practitioner considers the individual’s health restored.
ADAPTIVE MODEL
- A model of health, wellness, and illness that views health as adaptation to the physical
and social world in which a person lives and disease as maladaptation to this world.
Models of Health & Illness
2. Host. Person (s) who may or may not be at risk of acquiring a disease. Family history, age,
and lifestyle habits influence the host’s reaction.
3. Environment- all factors external to the host that may or may not predispose the person to
the development of disease.
Models of Health & Illness
- Travis and Ryan believe it is possible to be physically ill and at the same time
oriented toward wellness, or be physically healthy and at the same time
function from an illness mentality.
Emotional factors
➢ client’s degree of stress, depression, or fear.
➢ the manner in which a person handles stress throughout each phase of life will
influence the way the person reacts to illness.
Spiritual factors
➢ spirituality is reflected in how a person lives his or her life, including the values
and beliefs exercised, the relationships established with family and friends,
and the ability to find hope and meaning in life. Spirituality serves as an
integrating theme in people’s lives. Religious practices are one way that people
exercise spirituality. There are some religions that restrict use of certain forms
of medical treatment.
Variables influencing health and health beliefs and practices
EXTERNAL VARIABLES
Primary Prevention
• is also called true prevention; it precedes disease or dysfunction and is applied to
clients considered physically and emotionally healthy.
• aims at health promotion which includes health education programs,
immunization, and physical and nutritional fitness activities.
Secondary Prevention
• focuses on individuals who are at risk for developing complications or
worsening conditions.
• activities are directed at diagnosis and prompt intervention, thereby reducing
severity and enabling the client to return to a normal level of health as early as
possible.
Tertiary Prevention
• occurs when a defect or disability is permanent and irreversible.
• it involves the effects of long-term disease or disability by interventions directed at
preventing complications and deterioration.
Concept of Illness
CLASSIFICATION OF ILLNESS
Acute Illness
❑ Usually reversible , has a short duration, and is often severe
❑ The symptoms appear abruptly, are intense, and often subside after relatively short
period.
Chronic Illness
❑ Chronic illness persists, usually longer than 6 months, is irreversible, and affects
functioning in one or more systems
❑ Patients often fluctuate between maximal functioning and serious health relapses
that may be life threatening
Nursing Science
❑ Knowledge about empirical world is systematically organized into laws and
theories for the purpose of describing, explaining ad predicting phenomena of
special concern to the discipline of nursing.
❑ Empirical knowing ranges from factual, observable phenomena (eg. Anatomy and
physiology, chemistry) to theoretical analysis (eg. Developmental theory,
adaptation theory).
Nursing Ethics
❑ Goals of nursing include the conservation of life, alleviation of suffering, and
promotion of health.
❑ Ethical knowing focuses on matters of obligation or what ought to be done, and
goes beyond simply following the ethical codes of the discipline.
Nursing Aesthetics
❑ Aesthetic knowing is the art of nursing and is expressed by the individual nurse
through his or her creativity and style in meeting the needs of the client. ❑ Empathy,
compassion, holism, and sensitivity are important modes in the aesthetic pattern of
knowing.
Personal Knowledge
❑ Personal knowledge is concerned with the knowing, encountering, and actualizing
of the concrete, individual self.
❑ Personal knowing promotes wholeness and integrity in the personal encounter,
achieves engagement rather than detachment, and denies the manipulative or
impersonal approach.
Variables Influencing Illness and Illness behavior
INTERNAL VARIABLES
➢ Internal variables such as patient perceptions of symptoms and the nature of the
illness influence patient behavior.
➢ Patients more likely seek assistance if they believe symptoms are serious or life
threatening.
➢ Patients with acute illnesses are likely to seek healthcare and comply readily with
therapy.
➢ A patient with a chronic illness in which symptoms are not cured but only partially
relieved may not be motivated to adhere to the therapy plan.
EXTERNAL VARIABLES
IMPACT ON SELF-CONCEPT
❖ self-concept is a mental self-image of strengths and weaknesses in all aspects
of personality.
❖ The effect of illness on the self-concepts of patients and family members is usually
more complex and less readily observed than role changes. Self-concept is
important in relationships with other family members.
Impact of Illness on the Patient and Family
IMPACT ON FAMILY ROLES
❖ When an illness occurs, parents and children try to adapt to the major changes that
result. If a parent of an adult becomes ill and cannot carry out usual activities, the
adult child often assumes many of the parent’s responsibilities and in essence
becomes a parent to the parent.
❖ This often creates tension or anxiety in the family. Role reversal is also common. If a
parent of an adult becomes ill and is unable to carry out usual activities, the adult
child often becomes the family caregiver and assumes many of the parent
responsibilities. Such reversal leads to conflict responsibilities for the adult child and
often direct conflict over decision making.
Thank
You!