Non-academic factors influencing the development of empathy in undergraduate nursing students: a cross-sectional study
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
BMC
Materia
Nursing students Empathy Loneliness Personality development Sex characteristics Universities
Date
2021-12-08Referencia bibliográfica
Berduzco-Torres, N... [et al.]. Non-academic factors influencing the development of empathy in undergraduate nursing students: a cross-sectional study. BMC Nurs 20, 245 (2021). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s12912-021-00773-2]
Sponsorship
National Council of Science, Technology and Technological Innovation (CONCYTEC); National University San Antonio Abad del Cusco (UNSAAC) E041-2017UNSAAC-02; Institute of Health Carlos III (ISCIII) PI16/01934; Operational Program of the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER-LARIOJA) 6FRS-ABC-012Abstract
Background: Empathy is described as a core competence of nursing. There is abundant research evidence
supporting that empathy varies according to personal characteristics and targeted training. The aim of this study
was to characterize non-academic factors (personal and environmental) influencing the development of empathy in
undergraduate nursing studies who are not receiving a targeted training in empathetic abilities in their nursing
schools.
Methods: A cross-sectional study was performed in the three nursing schools located in Cusco city, Peru (two
private and one public). The Jefferson Scales of Empathy, Attitudes toward Physician-Nurse Collaboration, and
Lifelong Learning, the Emotional Loneliness Scale for Adults, and the Scale of Life Satisfaction, were applied as the
main measures. Also, information regarding gender, nursing school, and age, were collected. After psychometric
properties were assessed, all measures were used in the development of a multivariate regression model to
characterize factors of influence in empathy.
Results: In a sample composed by 700 undergraduate nursing students (72 males and 628 females), a multivariate
linear regression model was created. This model explained the 53% of variance of empathy and fitted all conditions
necessary for inference estimations. Teamwork abilities, loneliness, age, sex, subjective well-being, and nursing
school, appeared as factors influencing the development of empathy in patients’ care.
Conclusions: Findings have indicated that, in absence of a targeted training, individual characteristics and
characteristics associated with social and family environments play an important role of influence in the
development of empathy in nursing students. These findings are also in consonance with others previously
reported in different cultural settings including high-, middle- and low-income countries.