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A Cross-sectional Measurement of Medical Student Empathy

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Abstract

Background

Empathy is important in the physician–patient relationship. Prior studies have suggested that physician empathy may decline with clinical training.

Objective

To measure and examine student empathy across medical school years.

Design and Participants

A cross-sectional study of students at Boston University School of Medicine in 2006. Incoming students plus each class near the end of the academic year were surveyed.

Measurements

The Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy–Student Version (JSPE-S), a validated 20-item self-administered questionnaire with a total score ranging from 20 to 140. JSPE-S scores were controlled for potential confounders such as gender, age, anticipated financial debt upon graduation, and future career interest.

Results

658 students participated in the study (81.4% of the school population). The first-year medical student class had the highest empathy scores (118.5), whereas the fourth-year class had the lowest empathy scores (106.6). Measured empathy differed between second- and third-year classes (118.2 vs 112.7, P < .001), corresponding to the first year of clinical training. Empathy appears to increase from the incoming to the first-year class (115.5 vs 118.5, P = .02). Students preferring people-oriented specialties had higher empathy scores than students preferring technology-oriented specialties (114.6 vs 111.4, P = .002). Female students were more likely than male students to choose people-oriented specialties (51.5 vs 26.9%, P < .001). Females had higher JSPE-S scores than males (116.5 vs 112.1, P < .001). Age and debt did not affect empathy scores.

Conclusions

Empathy scores of students in the preclinical years were higher than in the clinical years. Efforts are needed to determine whether differences in empathy scores among the classes are cohort effects or represent changes occurring in the course of medical education. Future research is needed to confirm whether clinical training impacts empathy negatively, and, if so, whether interventions can be designed to mitigate this impact.

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Acknowledgment

Permission to use the JSPE-S was obtained from the Jefferson Medical College Center for Research in Medical Education and Health Care. We thank Phyllis Carr, MD, BUSM, for her role in reviewing the manuscript.

Funding sources

None of the authors received any funding support for the study.

Conflict of interest statement

None disclosed.

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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Daniel Chen MD.

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Chen, D., Lew, R., Hershman, W. et al. A Cross-sectional Measurement of Medical Student Empathy. J GEN INTERN MED 22, 1434–1438 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-007-0298-x

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-007-0298-x

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