Abstract

Although many resources have been explored and applied in our environment, personal internal and external resources have yet to be adequately exploited. A nursing theory and model for internal and external resources may be developed and discussed deeply (Zauszniewski, 2018) to provide newer vision and direction, while helping face the challenges of caring for patients with psychiatric disorders or mental obstacles. Recently, many breaking news stories have highlighted the hidden worries affecting our society due to patients with psychiatric disorders who live in the community. This has resulted in people, including student nurses, to retain their stigma toward mental illnesses and psychiatric patients and express negative perceptions and fear toward psychiatric patients (Choi et al., 2016). Therefore, it has been a challenge of psychiatric nursing education to develop and use a new and more-acceptable teaching model to help student nurses better understand and hold a more-correct perception toward psychiatric patients. The practice of clinical nursing profession still needs to be focused while we remain committed to psychiatric nursing education. The number of psychiatric patients who need more continuous care in community settings has increased significantly. The needs of psychiatric home care nursing should be particularly emphasized, as the manpower / capabilities necessary for psychiatric nursing are limited in community health nursing practice (Huang & Wang, 2015). More resources and psychiatric practice nursing professionals should be made available to communities for continuous psychiatric care (Wu et al., 2016). Strong and authentic partnerships are very important to acute care, education, evidence-based research, and practical policy development in psychiatric & mental health nursing (McInnis-Perry et al., 2015). In this column, resourcefulness theory is introduced as a new theory that may be applied in the psychiatric and mental health nursing practice; alternative teaching models are recommended for psychiatric nursing education; and finally, the importance of overcoming the difficulties and addressing the needs in community psychiatric home care nursing is also emphasized. It is hoped that this approach will help facilitate the further, positive advance of psychiatric and mental health nursing.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call