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Across
  1. 5. She is the “Founder of Modern Nursing”.
  2. 6. A group of people who share a common and distinctive culture and who are members of a specific group.
  3. 9. An organism that lives in an unstable balance of a given system.
  4. 10. It refers to unity and harmony within the mind, body and soul.
  5. 11. An ontological concept described as a human being’s struggle between good and evil in a state of becoming.
  6. 13. Internal, external and created forces that interact with a person’s state of health.
  7. 15. She represented her theory of nursing by drawing three interlocking circles; CARE, CORE, AND CURE.
  8. 16. It means love and charity, eros and agape are united.
  9. 18. She categorized nursing into 5 levels of capabilities: novice, advanced beginner, competent, proficient and expert.
Down
  1. 1. It is the process of choosing and embracing what is important.
  2. 2. It defined as the distinguishing characteristic of an energy field perceived as a single wave.
  3. 3. It described as nursing interventions that lessens the patient’s suffering.
  4. 4. It can be effectively demonstrated and practiced interpersonally.
  5. 7. It’s the set of values, beliefs, and traditions that are held by a specific group of people and handed down from generation to generation.
  6. 8. Activities or operations that signify the dynamic nature of the field.
  7. 9. The person has no background experience of the situation in which he or she is involved.
  8. 11. It deals with one or more specific, concrete concepts and proposition.
  9. 12. An observable behavior found in the health care systems in society.
  10. 14. It is the sole function of nurses, whereas core and cure are shared with other members of the health care team.
  11. 17. The ability to share in the person’s experience.