| Literature DB >> 21994895 |
Libba Reed McMillan1, David M Shannon.
Abstract
Background. Empathic communication skills are critical to providing high-quality nursing care to holistically understand the patient's perspective. A survey research design was used to address the research questions discussed in this study. Data consisted of responses from nursing students attending accredited programs in the southeastern United Sates using the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy Nursing Student Version R (JSPE-R). Findings. Comparisons of the total scores from JSPE Versions S and R yielded similar means and standard deviations with 115 and 114.57, respectively, and standard deviations of 10 and 10.94, respectively. The results of a one-sample t-test failed to render statistical significance (t = -1.22, P = .224), indicating that the overall attitudes of nursing students and medical students are similar. The 25th, 50th, and 75th percentiles and overall instrument reliability were also comparable. Conclusions. This paper supports the emergence of alternative factor analysis structures as applied to nursing students through statistical progression from exploratory factor analysis to confirmatory structures. Implications for practice explore the utility of empathy instruments in nurse education, such as empathy progression through curriculum. As nursing educators, the utility of development of instruments to measure effectiveness of teaching strategies and pedagogy for empathy enhancement in practice is important.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21994895 PMCID: PMC3169335 DOI: 10.5402/2011/726063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Nurs ISSN: 2090-5483
Descriptive summary of participants, comparison of sample group with national population.
| AACN | Sample | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Female | 90.3% | 88% |
| Male | 9.7% | 12% |
| Ethnicity | ||
| African american | 12.1% | 9% |
| Asian | 5.8% | 3% |
| Caucasian | 76.1% | 83% |
| Hispanic | 5.2% | 2% |
| Native american | 0.8% | 0.7% |
| Other | — | 1.7% |
AACN demographic figures regarding gender (n = 161, 787 students) and ethnicity (n = 148, 944 students) enrolled Fall 2005 [43].
Comparison of JSPE-Version S (n = 685 medical students) and JSPE nursing student Version R (n = 598 senior nursing students).
| JSPE S-VERSION [ | JSPE R-VERSION ( |
|---|---|
| Mean—115 | Mean—114.57 |
| Standard deviation 10 | Standard deviation—10.94 |
| 25th percentile—108 | 25th percentile—108 |
| 50th percentile—115 | 50th percentile—116 |
| 75th percentile—122 | 75th percentile—122 |
| Range—75–140 | Range—56–140 |
| Cronbach's Alpha—0.80 | Cronbach's Alpha—0.77 |
Confirmatory factor analysis—Hojat's model.
| Model |
| df | CFI | TLI | RMSEA (90% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Three factors | 458.79*** | 167 | .857 | .821 | .054 (.048 to.060) |
Standardized factor loadings for attitudes toward empathy in patient care.
| Item | Hojat [ | Current studyb | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F1 | F2 | F3 | F1 | F2 | F3 | |
| 2 Patients feel better when their nurses understand their feelings | .458 | .512 | ||||
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| 4 Understanding body language is as important as verbal communication in nurse-patient relationships | .480 | .424 | ||||
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| 5 A nurses's sense of humor contributes to a better clinical outcome | .443 | |||||
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| 9 Nurses should try to stand in their patients' shoes when providing care to them | .515 | .698 | ||||
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| 10 Patients value a nurse's understanding of their feelings which is therapeutic in its own right | .615 | .630 | ||||
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| 13 Nurses should try to understand what is going on in their patients' minds by paying attention to their nonverbal cues and body language | .510 | .509 | ||||
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| 15 Empathy is a therapeutic skill without which the nurse's success is limited | .421 | .427 | ||||
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| 16. Nurses' understanding of the emotional status of their patients, as well as that of their families is one important component of the nurse-patient relationship | .641 | .547 | ||||
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| 17 Nurses should try to think like their patients in order to render better care | .611 | |||||
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| 20 I believe that empathy is an important therapeutic factor in medical treatment | .534 | .403 | ||||
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| 19x I do not enjoy reading nonmedical literature or the arts (reversed) | ||||||
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| 18x Nurses should not allow themselves to be influenced by strong personal bonds between their patients and their family members (reversed) | .542 | |||||
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| 14x I believe that emotion has no place in the treatment of medical illness (reversed) | .607 | .650 | ||||
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| 12x Asking patients about what is happening in their personal lives is not helpful in understanding their physical complaints (reversed) | .500 | .590 | ||||
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| 11x Patients' illnesses can be cured only by medical or surgical treatment; therefore, nurses' emotional ties with their patients do not have a significant influence in medical or surgical treatment (reversed) | .596 | .641 | ||||
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| 8x Attentiveness to patients' personal experiences does not influence treatment outcomes (reversed) | .604 | .608 | ||||
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| 7x Attention to patients' emotions is not important in history taking (reversed) | .526 | .665 | ||||
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| 1x Nurses' understanding of their patients' feelings and the feelings of their patients' families does not influence medical or surgical treatment | .446 | .444 | ||||
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| 6x Because people are different, it is difficult to see things from patients' perspectives (reversed) | .711 | .759 | ||||
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| 3x It is difficult for a nurse to view things from patients' perspectives (reversed) | .709 | .722 | ||||
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| Eigenvalue | 4.2 | 1.5 | 1.3 | 3.40 | 2.63 | 1.69 |
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| % of variance | 21% | 8% | 7% | 17.0% | 13.1% | 8.4% |
*Printed with express permission from Dr. M. Hojat.
a: F1 = Perspective Taking, F2 = Compassionate Care, F3 = Standing in the Patient's Shoes.
b: F1 = Emotional Engagement/Compassionate Care, F2 = Perspective Taking, F3 = Standing in the Patient's Shoes.