Johanna Taubert

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Johanna Taubert (born October 22, 1946 in Duisburg ; † July 6, 2008 ) was a German nurse, teaching nurse, nursing manager and professor of nursing science .

Live and act

Johanna Taubert completed the nursing training in her place of birth Duisburg. She trained to become a teaching nurse and head of nursing and completed a teaching degree in German and Protestant theology. Between 1985 and 1989, Johanna Taubert trained as a group analyst and supervisor at the Heidelberg Institute for Group Analysis . At that time, Heidelberg was a productive place for such training, not least thanks to the work of the Heidelberg internist Peter Hahn . In 1990, the knowledge gained flowed significantly into Taubert's dissertation at the Faculty of Education at the University of Hanover on the history of "nursing between diakonia and patient orientation on the way to a new self- image ". In this dissertation she dealt with Erik H. Erikson , Heinz Kohut and Jacques Lacan in a chapter on theories on the development of self-confidence and identity.

From 1976 to 1984 Taubert was the head of the "Training and Supervision" department at the Diakoniewerk Düsseldorf-Kaiserswerth . Between 1980 and 1983 the Federal Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs sponsored the model project “Human Nursing Care”. With this model project, which had great impact, Taubert succeeded in setting new accents in the nursing science emerging at that time. At the same time she worked in working groups at other universities on patient orientation in nursing. As part of this project, Taubert also worked with the renowned Kaiserswerth deaconess Anna Sticker from the Kaiserswerth Deaconess Mother House, founded by Theodor Fliedner , who had stayed at the Heidelberg University's sister school for research purposes, as well as with the Frankfurt nursing scientist Hilde Steppe , who was a friend of Sticker . The research project "Humane Nursing" was scientifically supported by the Institute for Development and Structural Planning in Hanover.

Johanna Taubert from Ev. Was offered her first professorship for nursing science. University of Applied Sciences Ludwigshafen am Rhein . During this time there was an almost complete break with church institutions. Taubert came to the conclusion that these institutions worked contrary to the professionalization of nursing and were therefore rather detrimental to patient orientation. So she did not succeed in synthesizing the Kaiserswerth model project and the findings of her training as a group analyst. Two years later, she therefore moved to the Bremen University of Applied Sciences , where she set up the "International Course for Nursing Management".

DBfK and DGP

Taubert was the managing director of the German Professional Association for Nursing (DBfK) in Lower Saxony. Together with Karin Wittneben , Sabine Bartholomeyczik and Marianne Arndt (each with previous training or studies at the sister school of the University of Heidelberg ), Johanna Taubert formed the " Working Group for the Preparation of a Section for Higher Education Nursing Science " of the German Society for Nursing Science (DGP; in 1996 it was called still: German Association), which was officially founded on July 12, 1996. Johanna Taubert later became a member of the board of the DGP.

Due to illness, Johanna Taubert retired from active professional life in 2002. She died in 2008 at the age of 62.

Publications

  • Johanna Taubert (employee): From disease-oriented to patient-oriented nursing. Report on a model experiment in the Diakoniewerk Kaiserswerth (research report . The Federal Minister for Labor and Social Affairs, Volume 115). Published by Friedrich Johannsen, Federal Minister for Labor and Social Affairs, Press and Information Division, Bonn 1985.
  • Taubert, Johanna: Care on the way to a new self-image. Professional development between diakonia and patient orientation , dissertation University of Hanover 1990, Mabuse-Verlag Frankfurt a. M. 1992.
  • Taubert, Johanna: Balancing acts as starting points for care activities (on the care theories of Ernestine Wiedenbach , Hildegard Peplau ) , in: Stefan Goerres, Helga Krüger, Hanneke van Maanen (NL), Hartmut Remmers: Innovation of care through science. Perspectives and Positions , Altera Bremen 1996, pp. 129–138.
  • with Petra Kriesel, Helga Krüger , Gudrun Piechotta, Hartmut Remmers : Teaching care - managing care. A balance of innovative approaches , Mabuse Ffm 2000.

literature

  • Christine Auer: The scientific position of Johanna Taubert, In: History of the nursing professions as a subject. The curricular development in nursing education and training , dissertation Institute for the History of Medicine (today: History and Ethics of Medicine) of the University of Heidelberg, Wolfgang U. Eckart , Chap. 1.1.2, pp. 60–62, self-published Heidelberg 2008. Abstract dissertation Christine R. Auer
  • Monika Habermann (originally sister school at Heidelberg University ) and Margot Sieger: Obituary for Johanna Taubert , In: Pflege & Gesellschaft. Journal for Nursing Science, 13th year, no. 4, p. 382, ​​Weinheim 2008.
  • Hubert Kolling: Biographical lexicon on nursing history. Who was who in nursing history , volume six, pp. 277–281, hpsmedia Hungen 2012. Digitized

Individual evidence

  1. Johanna Taubert: Care from the way to a new self-image. Professional development between diakonia and patient orientation, Dissertation Universität Hannover 1990, Mabuse Verlag Ffm 1992, pp. 36–46.
  2. Simone Moses: The academization of care in Germany. Study series by the Robert Bosch Foundation, Hans Huber Verlag Bern 2015, p. 23.
  3. ^ Nachlass Hilde Steppe , Hilde Steppe Documentation Office Library University of Applied Sciences Ffm: Sign. O159 + O162 Correspondence Hilde Steppe and Johanna Taubert 1984.
  4. ^ Obituary of the German Society for Nursing Science , accessed on June 1, 2019.
  5. ^ Sabine Bartholomeyczik: 30 years DGP. 30 years of nursing science in Germany , lecture on the occasion of the symposium 30 years of the DGP in Berlin, with photo of the four founding members Marianne Arndt, Sabine Bartholomeyczik, Johanna Taubert and Karin Wittneben, accessed on June 1, 2019.