Dorothy johnson nursing theorist biography template
Tools Tools. Download as PDF Printable version. In other projects. Wikidata item. American nurse, researcher, author and theorist. Savannah, Georgia. Key Largo, Florida. Biography [ edit ]. Early life [ edit ]. Education [ edit ]. Career [ edit ]. Awards [ edit ]. Behavioral system [ edit ]. Books [ edit ].
Dorothy johnson nursing theorist biography template
References [ edit ]. August 22, Retrieved January 17, Powered by Campus Explorer. Dorothy E. Johnson was an outstanding nurse theorist and educator in the second half of the 20th century. She spent years developing the Behavioral System Model theory that she presented in written form in Early Life and Education Dorothy E. Johnson was the youngest of seven children born to a shrimp and oyster factory superintendent and his wife in Savannah, Georgia.
Born on August 21,a decade before the Great Depression, that event had a great impact on her life. Inshe completed an associate degree from Armstrong Junior College but after that, because of finances, took a year off from academic studies and became a governess for two children in Miami, Florida. It was during this time that she decided on a career that would encompass nursing, children and education.
She went on to earn a master's degree in public health from Harvard University in Boston in Nursing Career Following graduation, Johnson worked for a short time in public health nursing before beginning to teach at the Vanderbilt University School of Nursing. During her career there, she was an assistant professor of pediatrics, an associate professor of nursing and a professor of nursing.
Louis, MO: Mosby Elsevier. Grubbs, J. An interpretation of the Johnson Behavioral System Model. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. Holaday, B. The Johnson behavioral system model: Explaining activities of chronically ill children. Neuman Eds. Theory of the relation of social support, self-esteem, anxiety, depression, and perceptions of functional capacity to adjustment to coronary heart disease.
Riegel, B. Advances in Nursing Science, 11 274— Coward, D. Metastatic bone pain: Meanings associated with self-report and self-management decision making. Cancer Nursing, 23, — Photo credit. Dorothy Johnson. Tomey Eds.