Empathy Enhancement Based on a Semiotics Training Program: A Longitudinal Study in Peruvian Medical Students
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Fernández Rodríguez, Lissett J.; Bardales-Zuta, Víctor H; San Martín Pérez, Montserrat; Delgado Bolton, Roberto C.; Vivanco, LuisEditorial
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Materia
Medicine students Professionalism Medical curriculum Medical semiotics Lifelong learning Teamwork ability Empathy
Date
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Fernández-Rodríguez LJ, Bardales-Zuta VH, San-Martín M, Delgado Bolton RC and Vivanco L (2020) Empathy Enhancement Based on a Semiotics Training Program: A Longitudinal Study in Peruvian Medical Students. Front. Psychol. 11:567663. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.567663
Sponsorship
Fundacion Rioja Salud, in Spain; Universidad Privada Antenor Orrego, in PeruAbstract
Background: Empathy, as a core element of medical professionalism, is part of
leadership in medicine. This attribute, predominantly cognitive, involves understanding
and communication capacity. Empathy can be enhanced with courses on medical
semiotics. It appears adequate to apply this enhancement in the early stages of
professional training. Based on this, this study was performed with the purpose of
demonstrating the positive effect that an academic course on medical semiotics has
on the development of empathy in medical students.
Methods: A quasi-experimental study was conducted in one School of Medicine in
Peru, where medical students had to attend a 17-week course on medical semiotics
as part of their regular training. The sample, composed by 269 students, included
two cohorts of third-year medical students. As main measures, the Jefferson Scales
of Empathy (JSE), inter-professional collaboration (JSAPNC), and lifelong learning
(JeffSPLL), were used. In addition, students’ scores evaluating theoretical and practical
aspects of the course were collected once the course was finished. Pre- and posttests were administered in week 1 and in week 17. Analyses compared measures in
both moments and in time. Inter-professional collaboration and lifelong learning scores
and empathy scores were used as discriminant and convergent validity measures of
students’ course scores, respectively.
Results: Gender differences on empathy appeared, but only at the beginning. In the
entire sample, empathy enhancement was confirmed in time (p < 0.001), with a large
effect size (r = 0.45). This effect was also observed in both gender groups, separately.
On the contrary, no changes appeared in inter-professional collaboration and in lifelong
learning abilities in time. In addition, a positive correlation was observed among empathy,
inter-professional collaboration and lifelong learning abilities at the beginning and at the
end, confirming that the improvement observed was specific for empathy and explained
by the educational intervention assessed.
Conclusion: These findings bring empiric evidence supporting the positive effect that
training in medical semiotics has on empathy. In addition, these findings highlight some
gender differences in the development of empathy in medical students.