One of the main goals and principles of Martinsen’s philosophy is the idea that care and caring should be an all-pervading sentiment not only in nursing but in medicine in general. In other words, she opposes the idea that nurses should care while doctors cure – both parties should take equal parts in both processes. A new ‘gaze’ should be developed, a new way for doctors to view their patients – instead of a dehumanizing and analytical approach common in modern hospitals.
That being said, it is one of the major ideas in Martinsen’s philosophy that the very concept of hospital should be reworked and altered. Hospital should be perceived as a dwelling – a place where people are invited to dwell, live and spend time, a place where they feel just as home as they feel among the members of their family. Again, in this she opposes a traditional, production-based approach, in which hospitals are perceived and built as purely commercial buildings, places where patients are analyzed, processed and worked on to change them into something else.
According to Martinsen’s view, these are not just two different approaches to a single problem – they are two different approaches to life in general. Her approach views patients as human beings, as individuals with dignity in and of themselves. A traditional approach reduces patients to their diseases and conditions, takes away their humanity and sorts them into categories.
The idea of compassion, the view that every human being is unique and deserves to be loved and cared for is what makes Kari Martinsen and her philosophy so popular now, when we see the resurgence of humanistic approaches in medicine – and it is likely that we are going to hear more about her in the years to come.
References
- Alligood, Martha Raile, Ann Marriner Tomey. Nursing Theorists and Their Work. Louis, United States, 2013. Print
- Delmar, Charlotte. “Becoming Whole: Kari Martinsen’s Philosophy of Care – Selected Concepts and the Impact on Clinical Nursing.” International Journal for Human Caring 17: 20-29. Print
- Gordon, Suzanne, Sioban Nelson. The Complexities of Care: Nursing Reconsidered. New York, United States, 2006. Print
- Lundh, U, M. Söder, K. Warness. “Nursing Theories: A Critical View.” The Journal of Nursing Scholarship 20(1): 36-40. Print
- Martinsen, Kari. Care and Vulnerability. Oslo, Norway, 2006. Print
- Risjord, Mark W. Nursing Knowledge: Science, Practice and Philosophy. Chicester, United Kingdom, 2009. Print
Schultz, Sue. Reflective Practice in Nursing. Hoboken, United States, 2013. Print