Revista da Escola de Enfermagem da USP (Feb 2016)

Aromatherapy and nursing: historical and theoretical conception

  • Juliana Rizzo Gnatta,
  • Leonice Fumiko Sato Kurebayashi,
  • Ruth Natalia Teresa Turrini,
  • Maria Júlia Paes da Silva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0080-623420160000100017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50, no. 1
pp. 127 – 133

Abstract

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Abstract Aromatherapy is a Practical or Complementary Health Therapy that uses volatile concentrates extracted from plants called essential oils, in order to improve physical, mental and emotional well-being. Aromatherapy has been practiced historically and worldwide by nurses and, as in Brazil is supported by the Federal Nursing Council, it is relevant to discuss this practice in the context of Nursing through Theories of Nursing. This study of theoretical reflection, exploratory and descriptive, aims to discuss the pharmacognosy of essential oils, the historical trajectory of Aromatherapy in Nursing and the conceptions to support Aromatherapy in light of eight Nursing Theorists (Florence Nightingale, Myra Levine, Hildegard Peplau, Martha Rogers, Callista Roy, Wanda Horta, Jean Watson and Katharine Kolcaba), contributing to its inclusion as a nursing care practice.

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