Home, School, WorkplaceareaRefers to psychological relationships between individuals and between individuals and groups in society and other settings.
People grow up in relationships, forming their character and developing themselves,human beingin a similar mannerdevelopmentThe company will also In addition, based on the genetic predispositions inherited from parents, the family andareasocial skills by being nurtured in society and by cooperating and fighting with peers and friends.developmentLet them.
nursing theoryHildegard E. Peplau (Hildegard E. Peplau) was the first in the house to focus on relationships,Patient-Nurse RelationshipDescribe the structure of the interpersonal process, focusing onNursing Modeldeveloped the "The Nurse Practitioner's Guide to Nursing. Virginia Henderson (Virginia Henderson) has also developed a system that allows nursing professionals to "be(a) patientの基本的ニーズを充足する行動を専門的立場から援助するもの」と捉え、Patient-Nurse RelationshipThe report mentions the need for a nurse-physician relationship and a nurse as a member of the health care team, respectively. Additionally, Joyce Travelbee, Ph,human beingcounter for sets (of clothes, small furniture, utensils, etc.)human beingrelationship between thenursingand that it is a means to achieve the objectives of thehuman beingcounter for sets (of clothes, small furniture, utensils, etc.)human beingrelationship is the first encounter between the nurse and the person being nursed, the emergence of identity,empathyThe "rapport" stage is established after the "agreement" stage," he explains.

References
(1) Isamu Saito (ed.): Psychology of Human Relations, 2nd edition, Seishinshobo, 2007.
(2) Tetsuo Okado and Shizue Suzuki (eds.): Series of Psychology and Nursing Care of Patients and Families (5) Psychology and Nursing Care of Critical Patients, Chuohoki Publisher, 1987.
(3) Tetsuo Okado (ed.): Psychology for Nurses 4: Introduction to Human Relations Theory, Kaneko Shobo, 2000.