The journey through the history of nursing, and its philosophical and political influences
of the moment, contextualizes the interest that arose about the nurse–patient
relationship after World War II. The concept has always been defined as a relationship
but, from a phenomenological approach based on a historical, philosophical, psychological
and sociological cosmology, it is possible to re-conceptualize it as ‘caring interaction’.
Under the vision of aesthetics and sociopoetics, the object of nursing care is
the most delicate, vulnerable and unrepeatable raw material: the person, whose feelings
and reciprocity, which must be considered. In addition, it involves the adoption
of the socio-critical paradigm, as it considers the importance of actively involving the
person, not just patient anymore, or their family in the nursing cares, optimizing the
reciprocity inherent to this interactivity. In short, our philosophical and epistemological
approach to the concept of nurse–patient relationship proposes a new conceptualization
of it as a caring interaction.