| Literature DB >> 29671134 |
Daisuke Son1, Ikuo Shimizu2, Hirono Ishikawa3, Muneyoshi Aomatsu4, Jimmie Leppink5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Medical and healthcare professionals' empathy for patients is crucially important for patient care. Some studies have suggested that a significant decline in empathy occurs during clinical training years in medical school as documented by self-assessed empathy scales. Moreover, a recent study provided qualitative evidence that communication skills training in an examination context, such as in an objective structured clinical examination, might stimulate perspective taking but inhibit the development of compassionate care. Therefore, the current study examined how perspective taking and compassionate care relate to medical students' willingness to show empathic behaviour and how these relations may change with communication skills training.Entities:
Keywords: Communication skills training; Empathic behaviour; Jefferson Scale of Empathy; Medical students; Objective structured clinical examination
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29671134 PMCID: PMC6086812 DOI: 10.1007/s40037-018-0431-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Med Educ ISSN: 2212-2761
The questionnaire used in this study. Assumptions: items 2, 4, 5, 9, 10, 13, 15–17 and 20 are indicators of perspective taking; items 1, 7, 8, 11, 12, 14, 18 and 19 are indicators of compassionate care; and items 21–23 are indicators of willingness to show empathic behaviour
| 1 | I believe that empathy is an important therapeutic factor in medical treatment |
| 2 | Patients feel better when their physicians understand their feelings |
| 3 | It is difficult for a physician to view things from a patient’s perspectives |
| 4 | Understanding body language is as important as verbal communication in physician-patient relationships |
| 5 | A physician’s sense of humour contributes to a better clinical outcome |
| 6 | Because people are different, it is difficult to see things from the patient’s perspective |
| 7 | Attention to patients’ emotions is not important in history taking |
| 8 | Attentiveness to patients’ personal experiences does not influence treatment outcomes |
| 9 | Physicians should try to stand in their patients’ shoes when providing care to them |
| 10 | Patients value a physician’s understanding of their feelings, which is therapeutic in its own right |
| 11 | Patients’ illnesses can be cured only by medical or surgical treatment; therefore physicians’ emotional ties with the patients do not have a significant influence in medical or surgical treatment |
| 12 | Asking patients about what is happening in their personal lives is not helpful in understanding their physical complaints |
| 13 | Physicians should try to understand what is going on in their patients’ minds by paying attention to their non-verbal cues and body language |
| 14 | I believe that emotion has no place in the treatment of medical illness |
| 15 | Empathy is a therapeutic skill without which the physician’s success is limited |
| 16 | Physicians’ understanding of the emotional status of their patients, as well as that of their families, is one important component of the physician-patient relationship |
| 17 | Physicians should try to think like their patients in order to render better care |
| 18 | Physicians should not allow themselves to be influenced by strong personal bonds between their patients and their family members |
| 19 | I do not enjoy reading non-medical literature of the arts |
| 20 | I believe that empathy is an important therapeutic factor in medical treatment |
| 21 | I will show empathic behaviour to patients when I see their distress |
| 22 | I will show empathic behaviour to patients when I see them feeling pain |
| 23 | I will show empathic behaviour to patients when I hear their difficult experiences |
Confirmatory factor analysis for retrospective pre-training (comparative fit index = 0.947; Tucker-Lewis index = 0.940; root mean square error of approximation = 0.057) and post-training (comparative fit index = 0.918; Tucker-Lewis index = 0.908; root mean square error of approximation = 0.068): standardized loadings
| Factor | Item | Pre | Post |
|---|---|---|---|
| Perspective taking | 2 | 0.522 | 0.494 |
| 4 | 0.631 | 0.651 | |
| 5 | 0.319 | 0.319 | |
| 9 | 0.736 | 0.652 | |
| 10 | 0.467 | 0.474 | |
| 13 | 0.773 | 0.732 | |
| 15 | 0.495 | 0.397 | |
| 16 | 0.799 | 0.744 | |
| 17 | 0.432 | 0.404 | |
| 20 | 0.721 | 0.724 | |
| Compassionate care | 1 | 0.499 | 0.455 |
| 7 | 0.782 | 0.714 | |
| 8 | 0.862 | 0.779 | |
| 11 | 0.794 | 0.836 | |
| 12 | 0.774 | 0.756 | |
| 14 | 0.684 | 0.785 | |
| 18 | 0.183 | 0.253 | |
| 19 | 0.542 | 0.580 | |
| Willingness to show Empathic behaviour | 21 | 0.958 | 0.949 |
| 22 | 0.986 | 0.973 | |
| 23 | 0.946 | 0.941 |
Confirmatory factor analysis for retrospective pre-training: factor correlations
| Factor | Factor | Pre | Post |
|---|---|---|---|
| Perspective taking | Compassionate care | 0.494 | 0.469 |
| Perspective taking | Willingness to show empathic behaviour | 0.631 | 0.699 |
| Compassionate care | Willingness to show empathic behaviour | 0.244 | 0.334 |
Means (and standard deviations) for perspective taking, compassionate care and willingness to show empathic behaviour for retrospective pre- and post-training per number of medical interviewing training sessions
| Occasion | Medical | Perspective | Compassionate | Willingness to show |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interviewing training sessions | Taking | Care | Empathic behaviour | |
| Pre | 1 | 5.522 (0.829) | 5.372 (0.783) | 5.033 (1.108) |
| 2 | 5.262 (0.940) | 5.097 (0.866) | 5.346 (1.294) | |
| 3 | 5.209 (0.986) | 5.380 (0.793) | 5.392 (1.173) | |
| Pre | 1 | 5.560 (0.999) | 5.679 (0.678) | 5.544 (1.030) |
| 2 | 5.522 (1.041) | 5.548 (0.858) | 5.843 (1.163) | |
| 3 | 5.552 (1.022) | 5.740 (0.748) | 5.912 (1.167) |
Qualitative descriptive analysis of students’ open-ended responses
| What students learned | Learning how to show empathic attitudes to patients |
| Learning the procedure of medical interviewing | |
| Learning the importance of patients’ perspective taking | |
| Learning the importance of plain explaining | |
| Recognizing that communication skill are learnable | |
| Influence of communication on physician-patient healing relationship | |
| Learning the importance of listening to patients | |
| Recognizing that medical interviewing training is a process of socialization | |
| Variety of patients’ responses to the same question | |
| Learning the importance of efficacy of communication | |
| Recognizing that empathy is an essential characteristic of a good physician | |
| Learning that appropriate spacing is important | |
| What students found difficult to learn | Difficulty of patients’ perspective taking |
| Difficulty of empathizing patients’ feelings | |
| Difficulty of conveying what doctor wants to patients | |
| Difficulty of feeling compassion despite showing empathic behaviour |