Assignment: Potential Healing Blocks
Assignment: Potential Healing Blocks
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Assignment: Potential Healing Blocks
reveal potential blocks to healing, thereby
promoting active, collaborative engagement
in the design and development of solutions
that advance healing. The power of holistic
communication cannot be overemphasized
as a critical activity for promoting healing.
Clients must be open to accepting the
knowledge and expertise of caregivers
regarding the efficacy of various treatments
for pain relief but also have the
responsibility for learning more about pain
management and taking an active role in
decision making that fosters healing. At
the same time, clinicians must remain open
to hearing the client’s “story,” inviting
clients to partner in designing pain relief
interventions, and trusting in the value
of the client’s experiences of pain. Client
openness to describing the meaning of the
pain experience may foster their ability to
address issues that have previously blocked
healing. Such breakthroughs contribute
to deeper integral dialogues between client
and nurse, and aid the clinician in seeking
the expertise of other members of the
healthcare team in the restructuring of
transpersonal care.
To be sure, application of the dimensions
of reality within quadrants does not end with
the individual nurse’s holistic preparedness.
Table 1 also describes the importance of
applying integral knowledge within group
contexts so as to transform pain
management practice through integral
dialogues that promote engagement with
shared interdisciplinary, sociocultural, and
leadership worldviews about the meaning
and value of efforts to collectively address
and enhance pain management care. Finally,
application of the dimensions of reality
within quadrants requires nurses to tap into
their social consciousness about regulatory
issues that may influence pain management
care. Through the collective exterior
dimension, nurses are compelled to
work toward systematic changes in
pain management policy and practice
by assessing the current status of pain
management structures and policies,
both locally and nationally, and working
to become more active in addressing
identified gaps; gaps that fail to provide
clients with the highest level of evidence-
based pain care available.
Implications for research
The newness of the theory means many
nurses have not yet had an opportunity to
fully understand its meaning and test its
integrity. Nurses must engage in a certain
level of trial and error as understanding
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