Madeleine Leininger | |
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Born | Madeleine M. Leininger (1925-07-13)July 13, 1925 Sutton, Nebraska U.S |
Died | 10 August 2012(2012-08-10) (aged 87) Omaha, Nebraska U.S |
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Nurse, former CEO of theAmerican Nurses Association |
Madeleine Leininger (July 13, 1925 – August 10, 2012) was anursing theorist, nursing professor and developer of the concept oftranscultural nursing. First published in 1961,[1] her contributions tonursing theory involve the discussion of what it is to care.
Leininger was born on 13 July 1925. She earned anursing diploma from St. Anthony's Hospital School of Nursing, followed by undergraduate degrees atBenedictine College andCreighton University. She received aMaster of Science in Nursing atCatholic University of America. She later studied cultural and social anthropology at theUniversity of Washington, earning a PhD in 1966.[2] Leininger held at least threehonorary doctoral degrees.[2]
Dr. Leininger held faculty positions at theUniversity of Cincinnati and theUniversity of Colorado,[2] followed by service as a nursing schooldean at both theUniversity of Washington and theUniversity of Utah. She wasProfessor Emeritus of Nursing atWayne State University and an adjunct faculty member at theUniversity of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.[2] Leininger died at her home inOmaha, Nebraska on 10 August 2012.[3]
The cultural care theory aims to provide culturally congruent nursing care through "cognitively based assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts or decisions that are mostly tailor-made to fit with individual's, group's, or institution's cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways" (Leininger, M. M. (1995). Transcultural nursing: Concepts, theories, research & practices. New York: McGraw Hill, Inc.5, p. 75) This care is intended to fit with or have beneficial meaning and health outcomes for people of different or similar cultural backgrounds.
Leininger proposes that there are three modes for guiding nursing care judgements, decisions, or actions to provide appropriate, beneficial, and meaningful care:
(a) preservation and/or maintenance
(b) accommodation and/or negotiation
(c) re-patterning and/or restructuring
"These modes have substantively influenced nurses’ ability to provide culturally congruent nursing care and have fostered the development of culturally-competent nurses."[5]
1. Care is the essence of nursing and a distinct, dominant, and unifying focus.
2. Care (caring) is essential for well being, health, healing, growth survival, and to face handicaps or death.
3. Culture care is the broadest holistic means to know, explain, interpret, and predict nursing care phenomena to guide nursing care practices.
4. Nursing is a transcultural, humanistic, and scientific care discipline and profession with the central purpose to serve human beings worldwide.
5. Care (caring) is essential to curing and healing, for there can be no curing without caring.
6. Culture care concepts, meanings, expressions, patterns, processes, and structural forms of care are different (diversity) and similar (towards commonalities or universalities) among all cultures of the world.
7. Every human culture has lay (generic, folk, or indigenous) care knowledge and practices and usually some professional care knowledge and practices which vary transculturally.
8. Cultural care values, beliefs, and practices are influenced by and tend to be embedded in worldview, language, religious (or spiritual), kinship (social), political (or legal), educational, economic, technological, ethnohistorical, and environmental context of a particular culture.
9. Beneficial, healthy, and satisfying culturally based nursing care contributes to the well being of individuals, families, groups, and communities within their environmental context.
10. Culturally congruent or beneficial nursing care can only occur when the individual, group, community, or culture care values, expressions, or patterns are known and used appropriately and in meaningful ways by the nurse with the people.
11. Culture care differences and similarities between professional caregiver(s) and client (generic) care-receiver(s) exist in any human culture worldwide.
12. Clients who experience nursing care that fails to be reasonably congruent with their beliefs, values, and caring lifeways will show signs of cultural conflicts, noncompliance, stresses and ethical or moral concerns.
13. The qualitative paradigm provides new ways of knowing and different ways to discover the epistemic and ontological dimensions of human care transculturally. (Leininger, M. M. (1991). The theory of culture care diversity and universality. New York: National League for Nursing., pp. 44–45)
Leininger focused on two types of knowledge that were present in every culture.
- Emic Knowledge was the folk, lay or generic knowledge that was present in a culture
- Etic Knowledge was the professional or medical knowledge present within the culture and from the outsider perspective
These two types of knowledge intertwined to determine how culture was viewed within the indigenous society and how outside providers would react to it. It was imperative to Leininger that nurses understand specifically the Emic knowledge to have a better understanding of what could be done to tailor nursing care to be more culturally appropriate.[6]
"Leininger defined nursing as a learned scientific and humanistic profession and discipline focused on human care phenomenaand caring activities in order to assist, support, facilitate or enable individuals or groups to maintain or regain their health or well-being inculturally meaningful and beneficial ways, or to help individuals face handicaps or death." (Leininger, M. M., & McFarland, M. R. (2002). Transcultural nursing:Concepts, theories, research & practice. New York: McGraw Hill., p. 46)
Leininger provides a visual aid to her theory with the Sunrise Model.
While Leininger initially started with the creation of the cultural care theory she would later build the theory into a nursing specialty called Transcultural Nursing.[7] In Leininger's own words Transcultural nursing is:
"a substantive area of study and practice focused on comparative cultural care (caring) values, beliefs and practices of individuals or groups of similar or different cultures. Transcultural nursing's goal is to provide culture specific and universal nursing care practices for the health and well-being of people or to help them face unfavorable human conditions, illness or death in culturally meaningful ways."[8]
Combining her nursing experience with the doctorate inAnthropology she had received, Leininger wanted to have nursing look at patients with a cultural perspective, utilizing the indigenous perspective from the patient's own culture and how the outside world would perceive them.[7]