Travel Bee
Travel Bee
Travel Bee
● MAIN CONCEPTS:
○ Suffering - feeling of unease to extreme torture, and varies in intensity,
duration, and depth
■ May experience in intensity, and range from mild to extreme
■ "An experience that varies in intensity, duration and depth ... a
feeling of unease, ranging from mild, transient mental, physical
or mental discomfort to extreme pain and extreme tortured ..."
○ Meaning - reason as oneself attributes; patient’s reasons or purpose
○ Nursing
■ Role: help the patient find meaning in the experience of suffering
■ help the patient maintain hope
■ responsibility to help individuals and their families to find
meaning
● nurses' spiritual and ethical choices, and perceptions of
illness and suffering, is crucial to helping to find meaning
○ Hope - faith varying in degrees that can and will bring change that will
bring something better with it
■ core lies in a fundamental trust the outside world, and a belief
that others will help someone when you need it
● Nurse's job is to help the patient to maintain hope and
avoid hopelessness
■ 6 CHARACTERISTICS
● strongly associated with dependence on other people
● oriented with the future
● linked to elections from several alternatives or escape
routes out of its situation
● desire to possess any object or condition, to complete a
task or have an experience
● Confidence that others will be there for one when you
need them
● hoping person is in possession of courage to be able to
acknowledge its shortcomings and fears and go forward
toward its goal
○ Communications - a strict necessity for good nursing care enables the
nurse to establish a human-to-human relationship, and thereby fulfil the
purpose of nursing
○ Self Therapy - ability to use one’s own personality consciously and in
full awareness in an attempt to establish relatedness and to structure
nursing interventions; nurse’s presence physically and psychologically
■ Self-awareness and self-understanding, understanding of
human behavior, the ability to predict one's own and others'
behavior are imporatnt in this process
○ Targeted Intellectual Approach - by the nurse toward the patient’s
situation
■ Nurse must have a systematic intellectual approach to the
patient's situation
● NURSING METAPARADIGMS:
○ Person
■ Human Being
● Nurse and Patient
● unique, irreplaceable individual who is in continuous
process of becoming, evolving and changing
■ Patient
● a stereotype and category. Travelbee (1971) impresses
upon nurses that “actually there are no patients.
● There are only individual human beings in need of care,
services and assistance of other human beings.
● Nurses are human beings, Travelbee (1971) notes: “All
assumptions about being human therefore apply to every
human being categorized as nurse.”
○ Health
■ Subjective Health - individually defined state of well being in
accord with self-appraisal of physical-emotional-spiritual status
■ Objective Health - absence of discernible disease disability of
defect as measured by physical examination, laboratory tests
and assessment by spiritual director or psychological counselor.
○ Environment
■ Not clearly defined
■ She defined human conditions and life experiences encountered
by all men as sufferings, hope, pain and illness
● Illness – being unhealthy, but rather explored the human
experience of illness; classification and category. An
individual will react to illness depending on culture,
symptom burden, and whether there is a related
significance to those symptoms.
● Suffering – feeling of displeasure which ranges from
simple transitory mental, physical or spiritual discomfort
to extreme anguish and to those phases beyond anguish
(malignant phase of despairful “not caring” and apathetic
indifference)
● Pain – not observable; unique experience; lonely
experience that is difficult to communicate fully to another
individual.
● Hope – future oriented; desire to gain an end or
accomplish a goal combined with some degree of
expectation that what is desired or sought is attainable
● Hopelessness – being devoid of hope
● Interaction - any contact during which two individuals
have reciprocal influence on each other and
communicate verbally and/or nonverbally.
● Nursing-Patient Interaction - any contact between a
nurse and an ill person and is characterized by the fact
that both individuals perceive the other in stereotyped
manner.
○ Nursing
■ interpersonal process whereby the professional nurse
practitioner assists an individual, family or community to prevent
or cope with experience or illness and suffering, and if
necessary to find meaning in these experiences
■ accomplished through relationships between humans beginning
with an original encounter and then progressing through stages
of emerging identities, developing feelings of empathy and
sympathy
The nurse and patient establish a rapport in the final stage. Meeting the nursing goals
requires the creation of a genuine human-to-human relationship, which can only be
established by an interaction process. This process has five phases: the initial meeting
or original encounter, the visibility of personal and emerging identities, empathy,
sympathy, and establishing mutual understanding and rapport.
LOGICAL FORM
APPLICATION
● Practice - This theory has greatly influenced hospice nursing, wherein hospice
nurses focus on the relationships with their patients to improve quality of life.
● Hospice – self-actualizing life experience. Assumption of the sick role. Meaning
of life, sickness and death.
● Education
○ o This theory teaches nurses to understand the meaning of illness and
suffering.
○ o It prepares nurses too address the emotional and spiritual needs of
patients.
○ o The focus of nursing education has changed from the disease entity
approach (signs, symptoms, and nursing interventions) to a more holistic
approach.
○ o Helpful in preparing nurses to fulfill the purpose of nursing.
● Research
○ Several sources in research studies have cited some aspects of the one-
to-one relationship proposed by Travelbee.
○ Applied in the theory of caring cancer patients.
○ Gregory used Travelbee’s model to study suffering inherent in the cancer
experience.
○ Bennett used the model in relation to immune deficiency.
○ Baker used the model to study schizophrenia.
FURTHER DEVELOPMENT
Travelbee’s theory could be used to justify the research data. However, this theory
does not currently contain the empirical precisions to support such research data. To
be more readily accepted, the theory’s major assumptions must be assigned
operational definitions. Then the theory could perhaps generate the data needed to
facilitate further acceptance.
CRITIQUE
Clarity or Brilliance
● Ø All concepts of Travelbee’s theory are defined, but the definitions are not
consistent with regard to origin and explicitness.
● Ø Some of the definitions are owned and adopted others from Webster’s
dictionary. She explicitly presents some of the definitions, but derives others
from contextual usage.
● Ø Travelbee uses different terms for the same definition, such as the rapport,
human-to-human relationship, and human-to-human relatedness all have the
same definition.
● Ø Focus more on adult individuals who are sick and the nurse’s role in helping
them to find meaning in their sickness and suffering.
● Ø Deals in families and their needs but not in the community.
Simplicity or Parsimony
Generality
Empirical Precision
Derivable Consequences
IMPORTANCE
Travelbee provides nursing with the criteria for connecting to ill persons. She has
created a conceptual framework upon which to base therapeutic relationships with
patients, families, and communities in distress or having the potential for suffering. Her
definitions of the components of the metaparadigm of nursing’s phenomena of interest
add to the social significance and social utility of her theory (Roy, 1988). Travelbee’s
model teaches nurses to understand—or at least explore—the meaning of illness and
suffering in themselves. It is through this existential identification that one human being
can relate to another human being. The AP should promote self-reflection as human
to help other humans connect.
CONCLUSION
Travelbee’s grand theory of Human-to-Human Relationships provides nurses with a
foundation necessary to connect therapeutically with other hu-man beings. The
assumptions involve humans, who are nurses, relating to humans who are suffering,
are in distress, or have the potential to suffer. Travelbee stated: “Experiencing
meaning in illness, in particular, has long been identified as an important clinical
phenomenon.” Because of the nurse’s knowledge and experience, he or she develops
a rapport with ill humans. Nurses perceive and understand the uniqueness of every ill
human being and therefore facilitate their finding meaning in suffering (Travelbee,
2013).