THE POWER OF LOVING HUMANE CARE IN NURSING

This study aimed to develop an approach about the power of humane care within the concept of nursing through the building of a theoretical structure. Spiegelberg’s methodology was used to seek the meaning of the power of humane care for new nurses and for patients. The resulting theoretical structure is based on Parker’s theory of power, Patterson and Zderad’s humane care, Watson’s theories and Larrañaga’s concept of love. The elements of this structure are: the nurse, the ill or healthy person, the environment and nursing, all bound by an affectionate humane care. The final reflection was that all of them are included within the technicalscientific paradigm of modernity and that the patients hope to be care for by humane nurses.


INTRODUCTION
In Venezuela, nursing is facing a moment of transition regarding its consolidation as a profession.This is evidenced when studying central aspects like power, which emanates from the essence of its practice: offering humane care to individuals, families and healthy or ill groups.Power is the strength that triggers the changes demanded by society.Humane care, due to the debilitation of man's transcendental values, is present in the current century, marked by dehumanization among human groups.The researcher's large experience as a nurse at public health centers, in outpatient and hospital care, in addition to performing health care, association, administrative and faculty tasks has provided her with a view of the reality regarding Venezuelan nursing profession.Despite its irreplaceable social role in preserving human life, nursing does not receive appropriate treatment from society.This fact aroused the idea to review a few factors associated with this reality.
In this quest, very important empirical evidence was found, such as the lack of a Professional Practice Law and the fact that there are many academic levels, but without occupational profiles describing the tasks for each level.This causes confusion, since there is no role definition.Another evidence of the studied phenomenon is the encapsulated nursing work, with a monodisciplinary approach to health care.The historically prevalent leadership of very small groups was also observed, which are responsible for the profession's advancement, although this goes by unnoticed by the patient community.One of the most significant evidences guiding the study was the lack of the nursing profession in the political structure of the Venezuelan Health Ministry, with a consequent absence of participation in high-level decision making.
Through qualitative research and using the method proposed by Spiegelberg (1) , the phenomenon "power of humane care" could be outlined, delivered by nurses, in the search for the multiple perspectives of the studied nurses, patients, and the researcher's points of view.This method consists of six phases: outlining the phenomenon, searching for the multiple perspectives, searching for the essence and structure, building the meaning, suspension of judgments, and interpreting the phenomenon.This permitted searching the meaning that nurses assign to power and humane care.

PHENOMENON
Power has been extensively studied in sociology and administration.Classic reports like those by Parsons, Max Weber, Giner and others are guided by the conception that power is a key element in social relationships, in which one person's desire is imposed over others', and over their resistance, regardless of that imposition being fair or not.This has been referred to as "power over", as the capacity of exerting influence, adopting an expected behavior.
Power is an ability of individuals or groups make their own interests or motivations prevail, despite the resistance they may face (2)(3) .Power is also a social fact in which some give orders and others obey.Human groups cannot exist without power.When questioning about power in nursing, it is observed that this issue has been studied in the United States since the 1960's.Power development in nursing has been delayed by characteristics specific to the profession, to the place where nurses work and by their not knowing that it is a positive strength that can be used as an instrument to make the expected social changes.After reviewing some traditional conceptions of power, it was observed that they had the common denominator putting yourself above others, dominating, being or arriving first, in which there is no simultaneous place for two, regardless of whether the prevalence of one over the other is useful.
This conception of power over is not the power that nurses could use in their professional relationships with healthy or ill individuals.Those relationships should be horizontal and intersubjective, in which they share the goal of improving the health situation: nurses with their care delivery goal, and healthy or ill individuals as care receivers.
Previewing this encounter in an environment consisting of understanding, respect and transparency recalls Parker's (4) theory, which defends the innovative idea of power with, which is immersed in people's lives and should be sought with, for and from people.
Moreover, it should be constructed by integrating desires, efforts, and interests, so as to facilitate power with and impede domination or power over.It emphasizes that power with means the simple ability to make things happen, developed in an active and participative way; collectively, not coercively.The author of this study directs power in an integrative social action, which results from natural collaborative work with other people, and not as an imposition of desires.
This type of power is in harmony with present times, since people currently reject being directed with domination.Rather, they expect to be taken into consideration and be treated as human beings.
Moreover, the tendency now is for horizontal relationships, which do not exist with coercive domination, power over.This is demanded by sociopolitical, cultural and economic determinants.
Nursing, through the quest to provide society with better support, also follows the power with paradigm in establishing actions to sustain humane care.

The conception of love has been considerably
approached, and this study discusses forms of using it in nursing.By practicing loving humane care, nursing can acquire the necessary power to irradiate that love in health institutions and obtain social legitimacy in Venezuela.
Therefore, love is understood as "the ability to feel concern, responsibility, respect, and understanding toward others" (5) and, complementarily, love is finding and recognizing others considering their subjectivity, it is wanting others as subjects (6) , it is to affirm others and respond to their call.In addition, authentic love is unconditional, uninterested, and implies being loyal to others.Hence, it is assumed that every man needs to love and be loved in a natural way.Thus, love-based humane care in nursing would mean the authentic expression of its essence and the pathway to transcendence (7) .
Regarding humane care support, the propositions presented in Paterson and Zderad's humanistic nursing theory are considered, which states that nursing means "a special human encounter as the answer to a noticed need, associated with health quality -illness, of the human condition.Nursing seeks to care for wellbeing and improvement, through an intentional encounter, in which there is a call and an intentional answer, as a sort of dialogue (8) .

THE PATHWAY
A qualitative research (9) was performed, using the phenomenological-hermeneutic approach.Data collection was performed through the focus interview technique.Husserl's (10) ideas were used, which consider phenomenology as the method that attempts to understand man's world through an intellectual view, based on intuition over the fact.Knowledge is acquired by trying to see things from other peoples' perspectives, describing, understanding, interpreting.
In this case, the meaning of power for each keyinformant was studied, considering his/her own experiences.
Spiegelberg's (1)   Interviews concerning the meanings of power and humane care were performed by the researcher.
A photo camera and a tape recorder were used to record the information, with previous authorization from the informants, and guaranteeing the confidential character of the information they provided.Gemstone names were used as fictitious names.The eleven interviews were recorded, compiled, and integrally and faithfully transcribed.Next, they were analyzed according to Spielberg's method.Intersection matrices were determined, first by excerpts, and then by the intersections of the three excerpts (Table 1), which composed the study results to be interpreted, recommended and used to elaborate the theoretical structure.

Table 1 -Intersection matrix of all excerpts
In the search for essence and structure, Table 2 presents the meaning units obtained in the analysis of the information regarding nurses' perspectives.Results show the phenomena revealed in this study by the two categories, power and power of humane care, which include the components of love.
-The nurses' perspectives regarding power imply making decisions and solving problems, and are associated with authority, communication abilities, influence, dominium and dependence, which demands capacity.Interaction with the informants permitted observing the nurses' rejection to speak about power, and the confusion between the term and activities that require power.Other informants clearly identified that only power makes it possible for high administrative positions to exist; and in a very subtle way, others associate power with influence.This is understood as a reflex that Venezuelan nursing remains attached to the old paradigm of values, which is characterized by protection behaviors to ensure safety, in line with the organization's norms and requirements.This is related to the fact that Venezuelan nursing appeared in 1930, in sheer modern times, with mechanistic organizational models, in schools as well as in hospitals.Nurses show behaviors specific to this model, which continue after 70 years.
-Regarding the perspectives of humane care power, nurse informants associate power with the job position, but not with the care they provide.Only three of the nine nurses timidly associated power with the service provided to others.It is believed that, innocently, nurse practitioners identify the technical dimension involved in health care and, at a lower level, the affective, ethical and esthetical dimension, but dissociated from the knowledge they have regarding the immense power that emanates from practicing humane care.
-Patients describe nurses as being rushed and in a bad mood.This is interpreted as nursing continuing to be based on the technical-scientific paradigm, since that is how it appeared in Venezuela.
-Patients expect nurses to be loveable, thoughtful, caring, to follow treatments at the established time, and to be sympathetic, considerate and understanding toward them.They hope to see a humane nurse, but they find that person very technical.This is interpreted as a product of three relevant factors.One factor is that health institutions privilege technical skills.
Another fact could be that the health system remains anchored in the bureaucratic model, in which procedure abilities prevail and favor impersonality, thus moving affective, emotional or spiritual actions to the background.Hence, it disagrees with the new view of the world, which is focused on humans and requires nurses to provide eminently humanistic care.The third fact is that management at health facilities likely remains directed toward an administration that seeks quantitative production, performing tasks and controlling people.
-The researcher's perspectives regarding power and the power of humane care are products of the systematic study of those issues, in which love is the intersubjective expression that surpasses all others.loving humane care is understood as an intersubjective relationship between nurses and healthy or ill people, in which love is given and taken: concern and interest, respect, understanding and responsibility, in a reciprocal way.

THE THEORETICAL STRUCTURE OF LOVING HUMANE CARE POWER
-Nurse practitioners are those interested in the health, well being and lives of healthy or ill people.They respect, understand and take responsibility for their patients' health care.
-Healthy or ill people are those who receive health care from nurses and are encouraged to live again, become interested in their recovery, and have new dreams, strength and illusions.
-The environment is the physical setting where health care is offered, characterized by coziness, flexibility, participation and sensitivity.
-Nursing consists of a strong, united, cohesive team, centered on humane care and with a clear positive social image.
-Power is the social strength, product of the intersubjective relationship between nurses -health or ill individuals, groups or communities.humane care; following the health care process according to patients' needs and conditions; and, giving final instructions when the care period is over and make them comfortable until the next time you meet.
It is concluded that the theoretical structure of loving humane care is directed to emphasizing the beauty, deepness and complexity of the nursing profession and lead it to transcendence through love.

SOME FINAL CONSIDERATIONS
-the theoretical structure of loving humane care could lead to a powerful nursing in this historical moment; -practicing power and humane care in nursing is founded on the technical-scientific paradigm of modern times.;-there is disagreement between the nurses', patients' and researcher's perceptions regarding power and humane care; -the nature and sources of power and its advantages to nursing remain unknown; -spaces for discussion should be created to address the meaning of power, the power of humane care and the power of loving humane care; -practicing humane care power could be a determinant for the social legitimacy of nursing in Venezuela.

S
t r u c t u r a l e l e m e n t s c o n s i s t o f l o v i n g h u m a n e c a r e a n d p o w e r, a n d t h e f u n c t i o n a l elements are the nurse, the healthy or ill person, the environment and nursing.These items are described in tables 3 and 4.
ill peopleHence, this study presented the conception of loving humane care as an intersubjective relationship between nurses and healthy or ill people.The love exchanged in these relationships is understood as the ability to demonstrate concern and interests, respect dignity, take responsibility for health care and understand the implied health situation.Therefore, the theoretical structure of loving humane care consists of: concern and interest, understanding, responsibility and respect for dignity.This permits for redirecting nurses' work as a possible work technology, as shown below: -concern and interest are addressed through permanent face-to-face authentic conversation with patients; -respect for dignity in professional autonomous work, patients' freedom to make or participate in decisions affecting them, as well as having their rights respected, provides them with individualized health care; -comprehension through empathy, as a feeling that is expressed by putting yourself in the place of patients, not guessing but exploring what they feel regarding their health situation; -the other element is the responsibility understood from the perspective of the moral commitment to respond for the consequences of the interventions offered as caregivers and the obligation to complete the activities and tasks determined by the job position.The theoretical structure elements of loving humane care include Caring Nursing, which presumes health care with concern, respect, comprehension and responsibility, until it is passed to patients.These healthy or ill people should have become interested in and concerned about recovering or improving their health, to the point that they feel the desire to live and create new illusions.The environment should be cozy, welcoming, ventilated, illuminated, comfortable and harmonically decorated (art, music, nature).This gives new directions to the attitude of loving caring nurses, which involves the stages of receiving patients (which cannot be delegated); the recommendations and trust required for loving

Table 3 -
Loving humane care, with an intersubjective relationship between nurses and healthy or ill people