Caring is sometimes used synonymously with care, but it is a concept that is more concerned with the relationship with the object of care. It is an attempt to communicate with a person and to help that person grow and develop.developmentand it helps the other party.human beingWith sincerity and hope, respecting them asrelationship of mutual trustto develop, and does not simply mean "care". In other words, it means not only accepting the person as he or she is, but also developing anddevelopmentThe first step is to respect them as people who have the potential to
Since the 1980s, caring/care is whatnursingIt is now considered to be the essence of "caring" and a caring attitude and action toward others. Caring/care is polysemous, and the nursing profession andnursingThe view that the feelings, attitudes, and actions are those found in interrelationships with the people who are the subjects of thehuman beingSome believe that it is a moral principle that aims to protect the dignity of the nursingNaturally, caring in theprofessionIt means that knowledge, skills, and attitudes as a person need to be applied to practice care appropriately to the person's needs. And what is brought about by caring is a person's uniqueself-realizationor healthlivingacquisition, but on the other hand,professionthrough this experience,professionAs one of thehuman beingIt is to grow as a

References
(1) Jean Watson (Author) / Mayumi Tsutsui, Naoko Iimura (Translators): Exploring Caring in Watsonian Nursing: Measurement Tools as Clues, Japan Nurses Association Press, 2003.
(2) Jean Watson (Author) / Fumiaki Inaoka, Mitsuko Inaoka (Translators): Watson's Nursing Theory: Human Science and Human Care, Igaku Shoin, 1992.
(3) Milton Mayeroff / Makoto Tamura, Nobuyuki Mukono (translators): Essence of Care: The Meaning of Living, Yumiru Shuppan, 1987.