# Reframing Sustainable and Planetary Health Through the Fundamentals of Care: A Conceptual Nursing Perspective

**Authors:** Susana Isabel Rodrigues de Sul, Paulo Jorge Silva Nogueira, Andreia Cátia Jorge Silva Costa

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/nin.70095 · Nursing Inquiry · 2026-03-19

## TL;DR

This paper explores how nursing can help address global health and sustainability challenges by focusing on care and relationships.

## Contribution

It introduces a nursing-centered framework that connects personal care with planetary health and societal resilience.

## Key findings

- The Fundamentals of Care framework integrates physical, psychosocial, and relational aspects of health with sustainability.
- Health and digital literacy are positioned as public capabilities that build resilience against misinformation and polarization.
- Healthy Cities and relational infrastructures are highlighted as tools to promote equity and well-being at scale.

## Abstract

This discursive conceptual paper reframes sustainable and planetary health through a nursing‐centred lens by applying the Fundamentals of Care framework to contemporary challenges including population ageing, multimorbidity, climate disruption, digital fragmentation and widening social inequities. It argues that the Fundamentals of Care provide an integrative framework capable of connecting the physical, psychosocial and relational dimensions of care with broader agendas of sustainable and planetary health. By positioning nursing practice at the interface where macro‐level societal pressures are translated into lived experience, the framework illuminates how health literacy, digital literacy, Healthy Cities and self‐care in ageing can be understood as relationally and environmentally constituted capabilities rather than as individual responsibilities alone. From this perspective, health and digital literacy emerge as strategic public capabilities that strengthen resilience to misinformation, polarisation and civic disengagement, while Healthy Cities illustrate how environmental design and governance can promote well‐being and equity at scale. Attention to political, commercial and digital determinants further highlights the need for relational infrastructures that foster trust, participation and inclusion. The paper concludes that the Fundamentals of Care positions nursing practice as a relational infrastructure that links individuals, communities and systems, translating sustainability agendas into lived experience and enabling sustainable and planetary health to advance in ways that connect policy ambitions with equity and long‐term societal resilience.

## Full text

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## References

26 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13002137/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13002137