Humanization of nursing care from the i-other relationship: ethics, alterity and responsibility

International Journal of Development Research

Volume: 
08
Article ID: 
14560
4 pages
Research Article

Humanization of nursing care from the i-other relationship: ethics, alterity and responsibility

Kezia Cristina Batista dos Santos, Santana de Maria Alves de Sousa, Helder Machado Passos, Alinne Suelma dos Santos Diniz, Samia Carine Castro Damascena, Geysa Santos Góis Lopes, Josilma Silva Nogueira, Paloma Rocha Reis, Rita da Graça Carvalhal Frazão Corrêa

Abstract: 

Currently, the term humanization has been widely discussed in the health area, however, there are no changes in care practices. Considering alterity as essential for a humanized relationship by the demand for a singular assistance, this study aimed to reflect on the humanization of nursing care from the I-other relationship proposed by the philosopher Emmanuel Lévinas. The I-other relationship pointed out by Lévinas presents the other as absolute alterity and the self as passive subjectivity, which despite being in relation, remain radically separated. The nurse self, before the alterity of the other, becomes responsible for this, and from this responsibility the ethics operates. Health care is human because it is a response to the appeal that comes from the face of the other. Final Considerations: Caring is the essence of nursing. In nursing care situations the other remains as alterity and to assist it in a humanized way it is necessary to recognize and respect its subjectivity, welcoming not only a sick body but a singular face impossible to objectify, categorize and conceptualize.

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