4.5 Review

Assessing empathy development in medical education: a systematic review

Journal

MEDICAL EDUCATION
Volume 50, Issue 3, Pages 300-310

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/medu.12806

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Arnold P. Gold Foundation
  2. National Research Service Award Post-doctoral Traineeship from Agency for Health Care Research and Quality
  3. Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [5T32 HS000032]
  4. National Research Service Award Post-doctoral Traineeship from the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health
  5. Department of Family Medicine at the University of Wisconsin Madison [T32 AT006956]

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ContextEmpathy in doctor-patient relationships is a familiar topic for medical scholars and a crucial goal for medical educators. Nonetheless, there are persistent disagreements in the research literature concerning how best to evaluate empathy among physicians, and whether empathy declines or increases across medical education. Some researchers have argued that the instruments used to study empathy' may not measure anything meaningful to clinical practice or patient satisfaction. MethodsWe performed a systematic review to learn how empathy is conceptualised in medical education research. We examined how researchers define the central construct of empathy and what they choose to measure, and investigated how well definitions and operationalisations match. ResultsAmong the 109 studies that met our search criteria, 20% failed to define the central construct of empathy at all and only 13% used an operationalisation that was well matched to the definition provided. The majority of studies were characterised by internal inconsistencies and vagueness in both the conceptualisation and operationalisation of empathy, constraining the validity and usefulness of the research. The methods most commonly used to measure empathy relied heavily on self-report and cognition divorced from action, and may therefore have limited power to predict the presence or absence of empathy in clinical settings. Finally, the large majority of studies treated empathy itself as a black box', using global construct measurements that are unable to shed light on the underlying processes that produce an empathic response. ConclusionsWe suggest that future research should follow the lead of basic scientific research that conceptualises empathy as relational - an engagement between a subject and an object - rather than as a personal quality that may be modified wholesale through appropriate training.

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