Empathy among health science undergraduates toward the diagnosis of chronic pain: An experimental study.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Center

Abstract

Objectives: To analyse the empathetic response of future health professionals toward people diagnosed with chronic pain differentiated by the degree of visibility and credibility of symptoms. Methods: A total of 203 undergraduates performed an experimental task using vignettes depicting different diagnoses of chronic pain and completed questionnaires measuring dispositional and situational empathy. A MANCOVA analysis was conducted. Results: The main effects of chronic pain diagnoses did not significantly affect situational empathy (p = .587, η2 = 0.007, d = 0.229). The dispositional empathy variables perspective-taking and personal distress affected the situational empathy scores (p = .002, η2 = 0.072, d = 0.906, and p = .043, η2 = 0.032, d = 0.547, respectively). Conclusions: It would seem appropriate to foster intra-individual empathy factors among health science undergraduates such that they can more readily understand the process of individual adaptation to chronic pain and thus manage it more effectively. Practice implications: It would be useful for dispositional empathy to form part of the transversal competences of the training programmes of future health professionals from the beginning of their studies.

Description

Bibliographic citation

López-Martínez, A.E., Serrano-Ibáñez, E.R., Solís-Serrano, L., Ramírez-Maestre, C., & Esteve, R. (2023). Empathy among health science undergraduates toward the diagnosis of chronic pain: An experimental study. Nurse Education Today, 130, 105922. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2023.105922

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced by