Humanism at heart: preserving empathy in third-year medical students

Research suggests that medical student empathy erodes during undergraduate medical education. The authors evaluated the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy Medical Student Version (JSPE-MS) scores of two consecutive medical school classes to assess the impact of an educational intervention on the p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic Medicine 2011-03, Vol.86 (3), p.350-358
Hauptverfasser: Rosenthal, Susan, Howard, Brian, Schlussel, Yvette R, Herrigel, Dana, Smolarz, B Gabriel, Gable, Brian, Vasquez, Jennifer, Grigo, Heather, Kaufman, Margit
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container_end_page 358
container_issue 3
container_start_page 350
container_title Academic Medicine
container_volume 86
creator Rosenthal, Susan
Howard, Brian
Schlussel, Yvette R
Herrigel, Dana
Smolarz, B Gabriel
Gable, Brian
Vasquez, Jennifer
Grigo, Heather
Kaufman, Margit
description Research suggests that medical student empathy erodes during undergraduate medical education. The authors evaluated the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy Medical Student Version (JSPE-MS) scores of two consecutive medical school classes to assess the impact of an educational intervention on the preservation of empathy. The authors conducted a before-and-after study of 209 Robert Wood Johnson Medical School (RWJMS) students enrolled in the classes of 2009 and 2010. Students' clerkships included a mandatory, longitudinal "Humanism and Professionalism" (H&P) component, which included blogging about clerkship experiences, debriefing after significant events, and discussing journal articles, fiction, and film. Students completed the JSPE-MS during their first and last clerkships. The results showed that (1) contrary to previous studies' findings, third-year students did not show significant decline in empathy as measured by the JSPE-MS (these students, from two consecutive RWJMS classes, experienced the H&P intervention), (2) students selected for the Gold Humanism Honor Society (GHHS) were significantly different from their peers in empathy scores as measured by JSPE-MS, and (3) knowledge of selection for the GHHS seems to positively influence students' JSPE-MS scores. Maintaining empathy during the third year of medical school is possible through educational intervention. A curriculum that includes safe, protected time for third-year students to discuss their reactions to patient care situations during clerkships may have contributed to the preservation of empathy. Programs designed to validate humanism in medicine (such as the GHHS) may reverse the decline in empathy as measured by the JSPE-MS.
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The authors evaluated the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy Medical Student Version (JSPE-MS) scores of two consecutive medical school classes to assess the impact of an educational intervention on the preservation of empathy. The authors conducted a before-and-after study of 209 Robert Wood Johnson Medical School (RWJMS) students enrolled in the classes of 2009 and 2010. Students' clerkships included a mandatory, longitudinal "Humanism and Professionalism" (H&amp;P) component, which included blogging about clerkship experiences, debriefing after significant events, and discussing journal articles, fiction, and film. Students completed the JSPE-MS during their first and last clerkships. 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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid LWW Legacy Archive; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adult
Clinical Clerkship - organization & administration
Curriculum
Empathy
Ethics, Medical - education
Female
Humanism
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Program Evaluation
Students, Medical - psychology
Young Adult
title Humanism at heart: preserving empathy in third-year medical students
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