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A photo of Joyce Travelbee

Joyce Travelbee 1925 - 1973

Joyce E Travelbee of New Orleans, Orleans Parish County, Louisiana United States was born on December 14, 1925 in New Orleans, and died at age 47 years old on September 2, 1973. Joyce Travelbee was buried at Saint Louis Cemetery Number 3 in New Orleans, New Orleans County.
Joyce E Travelbee
New Orleans, Orleans Parish County, Louisiana United States
December 14, 1925
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
September 2, 1973
Louisiana, United States
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Joyce E Travelbee's History: 1925 - 1973

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  • Introduction

    Joyce E Travelbee's father was Charles R Travelbee (circa 1898 - 1944) and her mother was Marie Antoinette Heinrich (1904 - 1970). She had one brother, Charles Robeson "Roby" Travelbee (1924 - 1992). When Joyce was about 4 years of age, she and her family, including her older brother Roby, were living in New Orleans, Louisiana, on South Hennessey. Dad was a laborer at an ice plant. In 1945, she was living in New Orleans and was a cadet nurse in the United States Navy. She later earned her BS in nursing from Louisiana State University and a MS of Nursing from Yale University, For complete details of her career, see the article JOYCE TRAVELBEE - NURSING THEORIST.
  • 12/14
    1925

    Birthday

    December 14, 1925
    Birthdate
    New Orleans, Louisiana United States
    Birthplace
  • Ethnicity & Family History

    Joyce was Caucasian of German heritage on her maternal line. Both of her mother's parents had been born in Germany.
  • Nationality & Locations

    Joyce seems to have been a lifelong resident of Louisiana and may have been a lifelong resident of New Orleans: She was born in New Orleans and is also buried in New Orleans.
  • Early Life & Education

    Joyce earned her BS in nursing from Louisiana State University and a MS of Nursing from Yale University. When she died, she was beginning to study towards her doctorate.
  • Professional Career

    Joyce was an RN who was influential in nursing theory and psychiatric nursing. She stressed the human-to-human relationship model, and stressed that nurses should help patients with communication, empathy, and their presence.
  • Personal Life & Family

    Joyce Travelbee was born to Charles R. Travelbee (1898 - 1944) and Marie Antonette Heinrich (1904 - 1970). She had one brother, Roby -Charles Robeson Travelbee. Her father was born in Indiana and her mother was born in Louisiana. Joyce never married.
  • 09/2
    1973

    Death

    September 2, 1973
    Death date
    brief illness - reported to be cancer
    Cause of death
    Louisiana United States
    Death location
  • Gravesite & Burial

    mm/dd/yyyy
    Funeral date
    Saint Louis Cemetery Number 3 in New Orleans, New Orleans County, LA
    Burial location
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2 Memories, Stories & Photos about Joyce

JOYCE TRAVELBEE - NURSING THEORIST
Joyce Travelbee was born in 1926 and is known for her work as a nursing theorist. In 1956, Travelbee earned her Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree from Louisiana State University. She was given a Master of Science in Nursing degree in 1959 from Yale University. Her career dealt predominantly with psychiatric nursing and education. She worked as a psychiatric nursing instructor at the DePaul Hospital Affiliate School in New Orleans, Louisiana, and worked later in the Charity Hospital School of Nursing in Louisiana State University, New York University, and the University of Mississippi.

Travelbee died in 1973 at the age of 47.

Joyce Travelbee’s Contribution to Nursing Theory: Human-to-Human Relationship Model
Travelbee developed the Human-to-Human Relationship Model of Nursing. The theory was presented in her book,Interpersonal Aspects of Nursing, which was published in 1961.

The assumptions of the model are based on Soren Kierkegaard’s philosophy of existentialism and Viktor Frankl’s logotherapy. Existentialism places the accountability for people’s choices in life on the people who make those choices. Logotherapy, which was first proposed in Frankl’s Man’s Searching for Meaning (1963), is a form of psychotherapy that makes the assumption that fulfillment is the best protection against emotional instability.

The main concepts of the nursing theory are suffering, meaning, nursing, hope, communications, self-therapy, and a targeted intellectual approach. Each of these concepts is defined by Travelbee to help nurses understand the model.

Suffering ranges from a feeling of unease to extreme torture, and varies in intensity, duration, and depth. The role of nursing in Travelbee’s theory is to help the patient find meaning in the experience of suffering, as well as help the patient maintain hope.

Hope is defined as a faith that can and will bring change that will bring something better with it. It has six characteristics:

It is strongly associated with dependence on other people.
It is oriented with the future.
It is linked to elections from several alternatives or escape routes out of its situation.
The desire to possess any object or condition, to complete a task or have an experience.
Confidence that others will be there for one when you need them.
The hoping person is in possession of courage to be able to acknowledge its shortcomings and fears and go forward toward its goal.
Travelbee believed nursing should be accomplished through human relationships that begin with the original encounter, progress through the stages of emerging identities, and lead to the development of empathy and sympathy. The nurse-patient relationship is essential to successful patient care, and this relationship is established by an interaction process.

Building the patient-nurse relationship takes place in five phases: the original encounter, the visibility of personal or emerging identities, empathy, sympathy, and the establishment of mutual understanding and a rapport.

In this theory, health is both subjective and objective. Subjective health is an individually-defined state of well being in accordance with self-appraisal of the physical-emotional-spiritual status. Objective health, on the other hand, is the absence of any discernible disease, disability, or defect as measured by physical examination, lab tests, and assessment by a spiritual director or psychological counselor.

This theory has greatly influenced hospice nursing in that hospice nurses focus on the relationships with their patients to improve quality of life.

- Nursing Theory.org
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Joyce Travelbee
Joyce Travelbee
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Joyce Travelbee's Family Tree & Friends

Joyce Travelbee's Family Tree

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5 Followers & Sources

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