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Comfort is a concept that has a strong association with nursing.
Nurses traditionally provide comfort to patients and their families through
interventions that can be called comfort measures.
The intentional comforting actions of nurses
strengthen patients and their families (who can be found in their own homes, in
hospitals, agencies, communities, states, and nations). When patients and
families are strengthened by actions of health care personnel (nurses!), they
can better engage in health seeking behaviors. The positive relationships between these deliberate nursing
actions and comfort is entailed in the first part of Kolcaba's mid-range
Theory of Comfort.
Enhanced comfort, is an immediate desirable outcome of nursing
care, according to Comfort Theory. Additionally, when comfort interventions are
delivered consistently over time, they are theoretically correlated a trend
toward increased comfort levels over time, and with desired health
seeking behaviors (HSBs). The concept of HSBs was first introduced by Scholtfeldt (1975).
HSBs can be internal (healing, immune function, number of T cells, etc.),
external (health related activities, functional outcomes, etc.), or a peaceful death. The relationships
between comfort and health seeking behaviors are entailed in the second
part of Kolcaba's comfort theory.
Health Seeking Behaviors
(HSBs) are in reference to the small or
large group of patients being analyzed. Health seeking behaviors of patients
or larger groups, in turn, are positively related
to Institutional Integrity.
Institutional Integrity (InI) is NEWLY
(2007) defined as the values, financial stability, and wholeness of health care
organizations at local, regional, state, and national levels. In addition to
hospital systems, the definition of “institutions” includes Public Health
agencies, Medicare and Medicaid programs, Home Care agencies, Nursing Home
consortiums, etc. Examples of variables related to this expanded definition of InI include cost savings, improved access, decreased morbidity rates, decreased
hospitalizations and readmissions, improved health-related outcomes, efficiency
of services and billing, and positive cost-benefit ratios. Relationships between
Comfort, HSBs, and InI constitute the third part of the theory. Tests of the
theory can be on the first part, the second part, the third part, or the whole
theory (article in process).

Note: This is a diagram of Comfort Theory itself. In my book and early
article about Comfort Theory, there are 3 lines above this diagram that relate
to Henry Murray's original work, if you wish to trace the theory's historical
roots. This Web Site brings together current knowledge and experiences with
teaching, practicing, and researching comfort. Please e-mail
me with any questions, comments, or suggestions for this site. I need your
feedback to make this web site more useful for everyone! You can address your
comments to any of the categories contained in the theory or any of the pages.
Please visit the Reference
Page for articles that can be applied to research, education, or practice.
Please send any articles you you wish to be included on this page via e-mail
or by snail mail (The University of Akron, College of Nursing, Akron, OH
44325-3701). These will help to build nursing knowledge about the measurement
of comfort.
THANKS for your interest in nursing comfort.
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