Empathy, generally defined as the capacity to understand the perspectives and feelings of others, is a well-established facet of clinical competency and quality doctor-patient relationships. Research shows that a physician’s ability to communicate empathy is related to increased patient satisfaction [1] improved clinical outcomes [1], increased patient enablement [3], decreased patient distress [4], and lower burnout and depression among physicians [4]. Despite its importance for both patient and physician well-being, a number of studies identify levels of empathy that may begin relatively high upon entry into medical school, but then subsequently decline over time throughout medical training [5, 6], alongside measures of personal well-being that also seem to worsen [7]. Little is known about empathy and well-being before students enter medical school— during pre-medical education—which is a crucial time of emotional socialization for aspiring physicians and, as Cundell notes, represents an important opportunity for early cognitive empathy training [8]. This study, therefore, constitutes a vital first step in assessing empathy in this largely understudied population, as it examines how different aspects of clinical empathy relate to measures of well-being among pre-medical students.
Measuring Clinical Empathy
In response to the need to measure empathy in clinical settings, Hojat and colleagues developed the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy (JSE) [9]. They subsequently adapted the original JSE for physicians (HP-Version), medical students (S-Version), and other health professions students (HPS-Version). The JSE-S Version captures three underlying components of clinical empathy, that of Perspective-Taking (viewing a situation from another’s point of view), Compassionate Care (emotions in patient care), and Standing in Patients’ Shoes (thinking like a patient). Clinical empathy in the JSE is conceptualized as cognitive rather than affective, meaning that physicians understand patients’ experiences and communicate that understanding without experiencing the emotional state themselves [10].
The JSE-S has been extensively tested for its reliability and validity among medical students [9]. Numerous exploratory factor analyses (EFAs) confirm the three-factor latent structure of the JSE-S as it was originally theorized, as do the few existing confirmatory factor analyses (CFAs) [11–19]. A small number of studies, however, identify two [20], four [21], and five factors [22]. Even in studies that identify three latent factors in the JSE-S, only a few analyze the dimensions separately for their relationships with other variables. In an exhaustive literature search, we identified seven studies that examine the three factors separately among medical students. They find different relationships across the three dimensions with respect to gender [17], rates of change over time [21], other measures of empathy [23], willingness to show empathetic behavior [18], and burnout [24]. Several studies also show that only certain aspects of empathy decline, while others may actually improve [21]. Given that student empathy varies depending on the stage of training, it is important to develop a measurement strategy that examines the three “factors independently in a context dependent way” [21]. One such context is the pre-medical experience, for which research has not established baseline levels of empathy. To fully understand the phenomenon of clinical empathy in medical trainees, we argue that greater attention should be paid to empathy in pre-medical students, as well as to the ways that the three dimensions of clinical empathy in the JSE-S may differentially impact well-being outcomes for students.
Medical Student Well-being
Burnout and depression are prevalent among medical students [25–27], even among first-year students [28]. The majority of studies show that empathy is associated with less burnout and depression [4, 29–31], suggesting that relationships with patients can serve as a buffer to the stresses of medical training [32]. Nonetheless, some studies do not report an association [33], and there are concerns that the emotional labor associated with clinical empathy can produce compassion fatigue/exposure to vicarious trauma [34]. While a few researchers have measured the well-being of pre-medical students, no studies have explored the link between levels of empathy and burnout/depression for these students. One study, however, shows that a mindfulness intervention improved both depression and empathy among pre-medical students [35].
Research on pre-medical students is limited and tends to focus on reasons for attrition and stereotypes of the pre-medical personality [36]. Two existing studies indicate that pre-medical students have higher levels of burnout and depressive symptoms compared to their non-pre-medical counterparts [37, 38]. In a non-comparative study among pre-medical students, Grace finds that burnout and depression are negatively associated with interest in medical school [39]. There is also evidence that those with lower baseline empathy upon entrance into medical school experience greater decline in empathy thereafter, although this is inconclusive [5], suggesting, as some other studies have, that physicians’ poor health and less than ideal levels of clinical empathy likely begin before students enter medical school [37–40].
Establishing baseline levels of clinical empathy and examining the relationship between empathy and well-being during the pre-medical period is important in order to develop appropriately timed interventions. Thus, this study aims to 1) identify baseline levels of clinical empathy, burnout, and depression among pre-medical students; and 2) examine how different aspects of clinical empathy are related to well-being. Specifically, based on the literature discussed above, and is depicted in the conceptual model in Fig. 1, we hypothesize that the three empathy dimensions will have both direct relationships with depression, as well as indirect relationships through three facets of burnout. The results of this study will help establish baseline levels of clinical empathy and well-being among pre-medical students and contribute to ongoing debates about the existence and extent of empathy declines during medical training [3, 41–44].