reviewAcademic MedicineJun 27, 2013Closed access

Teaching Empathy to Medical Students

King's College Hospital · Johns Hopkins University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Results

The authors identified and reviewed the full texts of 18 articles (15 quantitative and 3 qualitative studies). Included interventions used one or more of the following-patient narrative and creative arts (n=7), writing (n=3), drama (n=1), communication skills training (n=4), problem-based learning (n=1), interprofessional skills training (n=1), patient interviews (n=4), experiential learning (n=2), and empathy-focused training (n=1). Fifteen articles reported significant increases in empathy. Mean effect size was 0.23. Mean MERSQI score was 10.13 (range 6.5-14).

Conclusions

These findings suggest that educational interventions can be effective in maintaining and enhancing empathy in undergraduate medical students. In addition, they highlight the need for multicenter, randomized controlled trials, reporting long-term data to evaluate the longevity of intervention effects. Defining empathy remains problematic, and the authors call for conceptual clarity to aid future research.

Citation impact

614
total citations
FWCI
14.83
Percentile
100%
References
65
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Empathy
  • PsycINFO
  • Psychological intervention
  • CINAHL
  • Medical education
  • Psychology
  • MEDLINE
  • Medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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