Copyright
©The Author(s) 2019.
World J Meta-Anal. Jan 10, 2019; 7(1): 1-30
Published online Jan 10, 2019. doi: 10.13105/wjma.v7.i1.1
Published online Jan 10, 2019. doi: 10.13105/wjma.v7.i1.1
Study | Country | n | mean Age | Male % | Field | Reliability | Items | Aims | Main results |
Balanced emotional empathy scale | |||||||||
Dehning et al[82] | Ethiopia | 237 | 21.4 | 87.3 | Medical Students | 0.72 | 30 | To examine the differences in empathy between first year and final year medical students in Jimma University, Ethiopia | Male students had statistically significant lower empathy scores |
Caring ability inventory | |||||||||
Ma et al[91] | China | 598 | 20.9 | 6.4 | Nursing Students | 0.77 | 37 | To investigate baccalaureate nursing students’ caring ability in the context of China and to explore the role of clinical practice learning in the development of students’ caring skills | Students in the clinical stage of training scored lower than students in the pre-clinical stage. |
Caring behaviour inventory tool | |||||||||
Labrague et al[111] | Greece, Philippines, India, Nigeria | 586 | 22.3 | 10.1 | Nursing Students | 0.92 | 42 | To identify the correlation between instructors’ and students’ caring behaviours and to explore the impact of instructors’ caring on students' perceptions of their own caring behaviours | The highest self-reported subscale in the Caring Behaviour Inventory was assurance (mean = 4.796), and the lowest self-rated subscale was connectedness (mean = 4.541) |
Loke et al[92] | Singapore | 657 | 20.3 | 13.2 | Nursing Students | 0.922 | 42 | To evaluate the impact of Singapore’s pre-registration nursing programmes on students' concept of caring | Results indicated a statistically significant reduction in the overall level of caring behaviour in first to final year students |
Davis’ interpersonal reactivity index | |||||||||
Neumann et al[112] (1) | Germany | 44 | 22.8 | 54.5 | Medical Students | 0.721 | 28 | To investigate the psychometric properties of two empathy scales | Reliability was satisfactory and comparable to international adaptations |
van Ryn et al[113] (1) | USA | 4732 | 50.1 | Medical Students | 0.825 | 14 | To examine individual predictors of first semester medical students' attitudes toward the value of physician empathy in clinical encounters | In univariate and multivariate analyses, Discomfort with uncertainty, close-mindedness, dispositional empathy, elitism, medical authoritarianism, egalitarianism, self-concept and well-being predicted students' empathy | |
Costa et al[95] (1) | Portugal, Brazil, UK, New Zealand, Ireland | 3069 | 38.5 | Medical Students | 0.776 | 24 | To examine psychometric properties (reliability, factor structure) of two empathy scales and compare them | The Interpersonal Reactivity Index and Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy are only weakly related, suggesting that they may measure different constructs (maximum correlation 0.313) | |
Emotional intelligence assessment scale - empathy | |||||||||
Senyuva et al[97] | Turkey | 471 | 20.65 | 16.6 | Nursing Students | 0.87 | 6 | To analyse the correlation of self-compassion and emotional intelligence of nursing students | There was a correlation between self-compassion and emotional intelligence (r = 0.400, P < 0.05) and that emotional intelligence has positive contributions to the features of nurses with developed self-compassion |
Jefferson scale of physician empathy | |||||||||
Kimmelman et al[114] | USA | 415 | 26 | 54 | Osteopathic medical students | 0.83 | 20 | To determine differences according to year of schooling in mean levels of empathy among osteopathic medical students | There were no statistically significant differences by year of schooling in respondents' gender, ethnicity, or specialty orientation and no statistically significant differences by year of schooling in the mean empathy scores |
Mandel and Schweinle[115] | USA | 328 | 24 | 17.4 | Physician Assistant Students | 0.8 | 20 | To investigate empathy trends among physician assistant students through their education and included gender differences and specialty job interest | 62% had lower median empathy scores toward the end of their didactic training than at the time of matriculation (P = 0.0001). Female students were significantly more empathetic at the time of matriculation than men (P = 0.0003), while both genders appeared to lose empathy in a parallel fashion during didactic training (P = 0.76). There was no association between empathy scores and prospective job category interest |
Neumann et al[112] (2) | Germany | 44 | 22.8 | 54.5 | Medical Students | 0.803 | 20 | To investigate the psychometric properties of two empathy scales | Reliability was satisfactory and comparable to international adaptations |
Paro et al[90] | Brazil | 299 | 61.7 | Medical Students | 0.84 | 20 | To adapt the Jefferson Scale of Empathy to the Brazilian culture and to test its reliability and validity among Brazilian medical students | Principal component analysis confirmed the construct validity of the scale for three main factors: Compassionate Care (first factor), Ability to Stand in the Patient’s Shoes (second factor), and Perspective Taking (third factor). Gender differences with respect to empathy were not significant | |
Calabrese et al[116] | USA | 373 | 26.1 | 52.8 | Osteopathic medical students | 0.84 | 20 | To investigate correlations between empathy and interprofessional collaboration in osteopathic medical students and to examine differences in empathy and interprofessional collaboration scores by sex, class year, and specialty interest | Significant correlation was found between scores on the empathy and attitudes scales (r = 0.42, P < 0.01). Women scored higher than men on the empathy scale (117.1 vs 111.9). No statistically significant difference on the scores of the 2 scales was observed among students who planned to pursue "people-oriented" specialties compared with those interested in “technology/procedure-oriented” specialties as well as in different years if education |
Costa et al[89] | Portugal | 77 | 31.2 | Medical Students | 0.77 | 20 | To model empathy longitudinally during medical school at three time points: at the entrance, final of pre-clinical phase and at the beginning of clinical training | Empathy scores at all times were higher for females than for males, but only significantly at the end of the preclinical phase. The model had satisfactory fit student's empathy did not decline over time. Empathy scores were significantly and positively related with Openness to Experience and Agreeableness at admission | |
Gonçalves-Pereira et al[117] | Portugal | 202 | 32.7 | Medical Students | 0.75 | 20 | To examine the relationship of empathy with professionalism | There was a weak association between empathy and person-orientation | |
Hsiao et al[118] | Taiwan | 613 | 23.3 | 89.1 | Nursing Students | 0.93 | 20 | To examine the psychometric properties of a Chinese version of the Jefferson Scale of Empathy-Health Profession Students among Taiwanese undergraduate nursing students | The content validity index of 0.89. Factor analysis yielded three components of perspective taking, compassionate care and standing in the patient’s shoes, explaining 57.14% of total variance. Women scored higher on empathy than men |
Kiersma et al[96] (1) | USA | 216 | 20.5 | 24.1 | Pharmacy and nursing students | 0.855 | 20 | To validate an empathy scale to measure empathy in pharmacy and nursing students. | The Kiersma-Chen Empathy Scale scores on the empathy scale were positively associated with Jefferson scale scores (P < 0.001). Factor analysis showed a poor fit for the Kiersma-Chen Empathy Scale |
Preusche and Wagner-Menghin[81] | Austria | 516 | 47.8 | Medical Students | 0.823 | 20 | To adapt the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy into a German version, examine its psychometric properties, to compare the level of attitude towards empathy with other adaptations | Item-total score correlations were all positive. Reliability was high; a 6-7 wk test-retest correlation for a subsample was 0.45. Factor analysis revealed a four-factor solution | |
Shariat and Habibi[119] | Iran | 1187 | 22.6 | 36.1 | Medical Students | 0.79 | 20 | To examine empathy in Iranian medical students and the psychometric properties of Jefferson Scale of empathy | Female students had higher scores of empathy and empathy decreased with higher years of education. The scale had acceptable internal consistency and test re-test reliability with a three-structure solution emerging from factor analysis |
Wen et al[33] | China | 753 | 36.8 | Medical Students | 0.83 | 20 | To examine empathy among medical students in China | The three factors solution accounted for 48% of the variance. The mean empathy score was 109.60. The empathy score of medical students had significant differences between male and females (P < 0.05) and academic year (P < 0.05) | |
Williams et al[88] | Australia | 330 | 34.8 | Paramedics | 0.75 | 20 | To investigate psychometric properties of Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy in paramedic students | The 2-factor solution, “compassionate care” and “perspective taking”, accounted for 44.2% of the total variance. The 17-item two-factor model produced good model fit and good reliability estimates. Three of the original items did not fit the model. | |
Khademalhosseini et al[120] | Iran | 260 | 20.9 | 46.2 | Medical Students | 0.76 | 20 | To measure the empathy score among medical students | Empathy scores decreased with increase in the students’ age (P = 0.001) year of study (P = 0.030). Mean empathy score in basic science level (65.5) was higher than clinical level empathy (55.5). Female students had higher mean empathy score (65.53) than male students (59.02) |
Leombruni et al[121] | Italy | 257 | 20.6 | 44.4 | Medical Students | 0.76 | 20 | To examine psychometrics and confirm factor structure of the Italian version of the Jefferson Empathy Scale in Italian medical students | The empathy scale showed an acceptable internal consistency (r = 0.76) and test-retest reliability (r = 0.72). Confirmatory factor analysis found that the 3-factor structure has acceptable data fit. Female medical students showed a higher mean empathy score than did males |
Mostafa et al[28] | Bangladesh | 348 | 29.9 | Medical Students | 0.88 | 20 | To measure and examine empathy among a sample of undergraduate medical students of Bangladesh | Mean empathy score was 110.41. There were significant associations between gender and empathy scores. The level of empathy in medical students gradually increases after clinical training in medical college. Non-significant difference were noted between empathy scores and specialty preferences. | |
van Ryn et al[113] (2) | USA | 4732 | 50.1 | Medical Students | 0.88 | 20 | (see details above) | (see details above) | |
Williams et al[122] | Australia | 1111 | 18.4 | Healthcare students (medicine, nursing, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, paramedics, midwifery, nutrition and dietetics) | 0.78 | 20 | To examine self-reported empathy levels of students enrolled in different health disciplines from two large Australian universities. | The mean female empathy score was significantly higher than the mean male score. Paramedic students had significantly lower empathy scores than all other participants except nursing students (P < 0.0001) | |
Youssef et al[84] (1) | Trinidad and Tobago | 667 | 22.2 | 35 | Medical Students | 0.77 | 20 | To explore the empathy profile of students across five years of medical training and to examine whether the Jefferson Scale for Physician Empathy correlated with a measure of cognitive empathy, the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test and a measure of affective empathy, the Toronto Empathy Questionnaire | There was a significant correlation between the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy and the Toronto Empathy Questionnaire (rho = 0.48). There was a decline in medical student empathy scores over time. There was weak little correlation between scores from the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test and the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy. Female students demonstrated significantly higher scores on all three measures. |
Hojat and Gonnella[123] | USA | 2637 | 23.4 | 49 | Medical Students | 0.8 | 20 | To provide typical descriptive statistics, score distributions and percentile ranks of the Jefferson Scale of Empathy-Medical Student version | The score distributions of the Jefferson Scale of Empathy tended to be moderately skewed and platykurtic. Women obtained a significantly higher mean score (116.2 ± 9.7) than men (112.3 ± 10.8) on the Jefferson Scale of Empathy (P < 0.01). The tentative cut-off score to identify low scorers was ≤ 95 for men and ≤ 100 for women. |
Jeon and Cho[103] | South Korea | 447 | 18.1 | Pharmacy students | 0.713 | 20 | To validate an empathy sale and to investigate the empathy levels of pharmacy students in South Korea | The 3-factor model of the empathy scale was confirmed by confirmatory factor analysis and the convergent validity was also supported by its correlations with the interpersonal reactivity index subscales. | |
Montanari et al[104] | Italy | 797 | 22.63 | 26 | Nursing Students | 0.78 | 20 | To test the psychometric properties of the Jefferson Scale of Empathy-Health Professional Student’s version and to describe their empathic engagement | Fit for a three-factor solution for 14 items: compassionate care/emotional engagement, perspective-taking, and standing in the patient's shoes. Confirmatory factor analysis on the second half of the sample showed good fit indexes for the 14-item solution and the 20 item solution of the scale, with the exception of one item |
Park et al[87] | South Korea | 5343 | 26.4 | 61.5 | Medical Students | 0.83 | 20 | To evaluate empathy in Korean medical students throughout the country and to make suggestions to improve empathy | Females and post-baccalaureate students had higher scores. Students from higher grade levels had lower scores than those from the lower grade levels |
Park et al[99] | South Korea | 2692 | 24.7 | 62 | Medical Students | 0.715 | 20 | To examine the relationship between stress, social support, and empathy among medical students | Empathy and social support were positively correlated, and empathy and stress negatively correlated. In the regression model, stress and social support predicted empathy |
Petek Ster and Selic[102] | Slovenia | 845 | 22.5 | 31.4 | Medical Students | 0.781 | 20 | To re-validate the Jefferson Scale of Empathy (Student version) and its factor structure prior further research on empathy in medical students. | Females achieved higher empathy scores. The three-factor structure of empathy was confirmed. A higher proportion of explained variation was observed with Perspective Taking and Standing in the Patient's Shoes, and better internal consistency was noted in a reduced-item scale (16-18 items). |
Williams et al[94] | Malaysia | 204 | 20 | 44.3 | Medical Students | 0.7 | 20 | To examine empathy scores in undergraduate medical students | The mean empathy score for first year students was significantly higher than second year students (P < 0.05). No significant difference relating to gender |
Aggarwal et al[86] | India | 978 | 21.6 | 31.6 | Dentistry Students | 0.677 | 20 | To measure the self-reported empathy levels among dental undergraduate and postgraduate students and to review factors that could affect empathy | There were significant differences in empathy scores by gender and age (P < 0.01) |
Costa et al[95] (2) | Portugal, Brazil, UK, New Zealand, Ireland | 3069 | 38.5 | Medical Students | 0.69 | 20 | (see details above) | (see details above) | |
Ferreira-Valente et al[101] | Spain | 1104 | 20.7 | 32 | Medical Students | 0.78 | 20 | To examine the psychometric properties of a Spanish empathy scale | The Spanish scale had acceptable to good sensitivity, convergent validity and reliability. The confirmatory factor analysis supported the three-factor solution and the second order latent factor model |
Jordan and Foster[98] | USA | 163 | Medical Students | 0.8 | 20 | Examination of the interpersonal theory of clinical, personality, and social psychology to examine the construct of empathy and theorize about likely interpersonal correlates | All factors of empathy were related to interpersonal warmth. Perspective taking and compassionate care were associated with submissiveness. Walking in the patient’s shoes was correlated with social support and less loneliness | ||
Mahoney et al[124] | Australia | 281 | 26 | 42 | Medical Students | 0.815 | 20 | To examine student and doctor empathy, and possible associations between empathy and the structure of clinical learning | Empathy decreased during the course of each year, but no differences between years of clinical education. |
Sng et al[93] | Singapore | 881 | 46.3 | Medical Students | 0.83 | 20 | To investigate psychometric properties of Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy | Empathy declined between preclinical and clinical years. Female and medical specialty interest respondents had higher scores but factor analysis suggested that the three factor model did not fit adequately | |
Spasenoska et al[100] | Malaysia | 193 | 19.3 | 43 | Medical Students | 0.68 | 20 | To investigate psychometric properties of Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy | The scale was best interpreted as a two factor solution of perspective taking and compassionate care |
Stansfield et al[125] | USA | 4797 | 23.7 | 50.5 | Medical Students | 0.86 | 20 | Analysis of factor structure of empathy and relations to other factors | Components of empathy change over time during undergraduate medical education (towards the end of education, it is a four factor structure of feelings, importance, ease, and metacognitive effort |
Kiersma-Chen empathy scale | |||||||||
Kiersma et al[96] (2) | USA | 216 | 20.5 | 24.1 | Pharmacy and nursing students | 0.86 | 15 | (see details above) | (see details above) |
Narcissism, aloofness, confidence, empathy (NACE) scale - empathy | |||||||||
Pitt et al[85] | Australia | 133 | 27 | 14 | Nursing Students | 0.79 | 24 | To describe the personal qualities of newly enrolled Bachelor of Nursing students; to determine if these a change according to age, gender, and time | Females were significantly more conscientious, community orientated and involved while males had significantly higher narcissism and aloofness scores and lower empathy |
Patient-Practitioner orientation scale | |||||||||
Dockens et al[126] | USA | 93 | 22.6 | 6.5 | Speech and hearing sciences students | 0.78 | 18 | To determine preferences to patient-centeredness in pre-service speech and hearing students in the field of speech and hearing sciences | Across exposure levels, students exhibited high preference to patient centeredness with a mean empathy score of 4.13. A paired sample t-test revealed a significant difference (P < 0.0001) between the caring and sharing subscales of the empathy scale. No significant differences across levels of exposure for sharing subscale and caring subscale |
Professionalism assessment scale - empathy | |||||||||
Klemenc-Ketis and Vrecko[127] | Slovenia | 122 | 22.1 | 22.1 | Medical Students | 0.84 | 10 | To develop and validate a scale for the assessment of professionalism in medical students based on students' perceptions of and attitudes towards professionalism in medicine | The scale was developed with 22 items. The Cronbach’s alpha of the scale was 0.88. Factor analysis revealed three factors: empathy and humanism, professional relationships and development and responsibility |
Pro-Social personality battery (Other-Oriented empathy) | |||||||||
Eley et al[128] | USA | 145 | 24 | 40.7 | Medical Students | 0.77 | 18 | To examine personality trait profiles of rural longitudinal integrated clerkships students | Rural longitudinal integrated clerkships students who intended and matched to family medicine showed the highest levels of Reward Dependence (warm sociability) and Other-Oriented Empathy compared to any other specialty |
Toronto composite empathy scale | |||||||||
Tsiantou et al[83] | Greece | 460 | 20.7 | 34.8 | Dentistry Students | 0.75 | 52 | To examine empathy among dentistry students in Greece and validate the Toronto Composite Empathy Scale | The scale has good discriminant and convergent validities. Test-retest reliabilities ranged from 0.478 to 0.779. Rotated factor analysis indicated that items loaded on two cognitive and three emotional factors. Females had significantly higher empathy scores |
Toronto Empathy Questionnaire | |||||||||
Youssef et al[84] (2) | Trinidad and Tobago | 662 | 22.2 | 35 | Medical Students | 0.85 | 16 | (see details above) | (see details above) |
- Citation: Fragkos KC, Sotiropoulos I, Frangos CC. Empathy assessment in healthcare students is highly heterogeneous: A systematic review and meta-analysis (2012-2016). World J Meta-Anal 2019; 7(1): 1-30
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2308-3840/full/v7/i1/1.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.13105/wjma.v7.i1.1