| Literature DB >> 27535319 |
Shane Sinclair1,2, Kate Beamer1, Thomas F Hack3,4, Susan McClement3,4, Shelley Raffin Bouchal1, Harvey M Chochinov3,5, Neil A Hagen2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Compassion is considered an essential element in quality patient care. One of the conceptual challenges in healthcare literature is that compassion is often confused with sympathy and empathy. Studies comparing and contrasting patients' perspectives of sympathy, empathy, and compassion are largely absent. AIM: The aim of this study was to investigate advanced cancer patients' understandings, experiences, and preferences of "sympathy," "empathy," and "compassion" in order to develop conceptual clarity for future research and to inform clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Sympathy; advanced cancer; compassion; empathy; grounded theory; palliative care
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27535319 PMCID: PMC5405806 DOI: 10.1177/0269216316663499
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Palliat Med ISSN: 0269-2163 Impact factor: 4.762
Guiding interview questions.
| 1. What are the things that you have found to be important to your well-being during your illness? Particularly as it relates to the care you have received? |
Source: Sinclair et al.[28]
Demographic information (numbers expressed as percentages, unless otherwise stated).
| Mean age (years) | 61.44 |
| Men | 35.19 |
| Women | 64.81 |
| Mean (range) time between interview and death (days)[ | 79.56 (8–261) |
| Marital status | |
| Never married | 3.70 |
| Married/common law/cohabiting | 70.37 |
| Divorced/separated | 16.67 |
| Widowed | 7.41 |
| Other | 1.85 |
| Person living with[ | |
| Spouse/partner | 70.37 |
| Parent(s) | 3.70 |
| Sibling(s) | 1.85 |
| Child(ren) | 31.48 |
| Other relative(s) | 5.56 |
| Friend(s) | 1.85 |
| Other | 5.56 |
| Alone | 18.52 |
| Highest education level attained | |
| No formal education | 0.00 |
| Elementary—completed | 1.85 |
| Some high school | 16.67 |
| High school—completed | 9.26 |
| Some university/college/technical school | 20.37 |
| University/college/technical school—completed | 38.89 |
| Post-graduate university—completed | 12.96 |
| Employment status[ | |
| Retired | 59.26 |
| On sick leave | 5.56 |
| On disability | 31.48 |
| Working full-time | 1.85 |
| Working part-time | 5.56 |
| Household net income | |
| ≤CAD$60,000/year | 29.62 |
| >CAD$60,000/year | 70.38 |
| Religious and spiritual status | |
| Spiritual and religious | 53.70 |
| Spiritual but not religious | 37.04 |
| Religious but not spiritual | 3.70 |
| None | 5.56 |
Based on 45 patients who had died at the time of analysis.
The total for these categories exceeds 100% because patients were permitted to provide more than one response.
Figure 1.The compassion model.
Reprinted from Sinclair et al.[28]
The relationship between sympathy, empathy, and compassion.
| Sympathy | Empathy | Compassion | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | A pity-based response to a distressing situation that is characterized by a lack of relational understanding and the self-preservation of the observer | An affective response that acknowledges and attempts to understand an individual’s suffering through emotional resonance | A virtuous response that seeks to address the suffering and needs of a person through relational understanding and action |
| Defining characteristics | Observing | Acknowledgment of suffering | Supererogatory |
| Response to suffering | Acknowledgment | Acknowledgment, understanding, and emotional resonance | Acknowledgment, understanding, and emotional resonance linked with action aimed at understanding the person and the amelioration of suffering |
| Type of response | A visceral reaction to a distressing situation | Objective and affective response to a distressing situation | A proactive and targeted response to a distressing situation |
| Emotional state of observer | Emotional dissonance | Emotional resonance and emotional contagion (“feeling with”) | Emotional engagement and resilience |
| Motivators of response | Pity/ego/obligation | Circumstantial/affective state of observer/duty/relatedness to patient/deservedness of patient | Virtues/dispositional |
| Relationship of observer to suffering | External | Proximal/isomorphic | Instrumental/relational/transmorphic |
| Intended outcomes | Self-preservation of observer | Objective and affective understanding of sufferer | Amelioration of multifactorial suffering |
| Patient-reported outcomes | Demoralized | Heard | Relief of suffering |
| Examples | “I’m so sorry” | “Help me to understand your situation” | “I know you are suffering, but there are things I can do to help it be better?” |
Figure 2.Sympathy, empathy, and compassion.
Major categories and themes.
| Categories | Themes |
|---|---|
| Sympathy | An unwanted pity-based response |
| A shallow and superficial emotion based on self-preservation | |
| An unhelpful and misguided reaction to suffering | |
| Empathy | Engaging suffering |
| Connecting to and understanding the person | |
| Emotional resonance: putting yourself in the patient’s shoes | |
| Compassion | Motivated by love |
| The altruistic role of the responder | |
| Action oriented | |
| Small supererogatory acts of kindness |