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Nursing and justice as a basic human need

journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Megan-Jane JohnstoneMegan-Jane Johnstone
This paper explores the idea that justice is a basic human need akin to those famously depicted in Maslow’s hierarchy of human needs and, as such, warrants recognition as a core element in representative ideas about nursing. Early nurse theorists positioned the principles and practice of nursing as having their origins in ‘universal human needs’. The principle of deriving nursing care from human needs was thought to provide a guide not only for promoting health, but for preventing disease and illness. The nursing profession has had a longstanding commitment to social justice as a core professional value and ideal, obligating nurses to address the social conditions that undermine people’s health.The idea of justice as a universal human need per se and its possible relationship to people’s health outcomes has, however, not been considered. One reason for this is that justice in nursing discourse has more commonly been associated with law and ethics, and the legal and ethical responsibilities of nurses in relation to individualized patient care and, more recently, changing systems of care to improve health and health outcomes. Although this association is not incorrect, it is incomplete.A key aim of this paper is to redress this oversight and to encourage a broader conceptualization of justice as necessary for human survival, health and development, not merely as a professional value, or legal or ethical principle for guiding human conduct.

History

Journal

Nursing philosophy : an international journal for healthcare professionals

Volume

12

Issue

1

Season

January 2011

Pagination

34 - 44

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Location

Oxford, England

ISSN

1466-7681

eISSN

1466-769X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, Blackwell Publishing Ltd

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