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Affective, sensory and empathic sharing of another's pain: The Empathy for Pain Scale.

Authors :
Giummarra MJ
Fitzgibbon BM
Georgiou-Karistianis N
Beukelman M
Verdejo-Garcia A
Blumberg Z
Chou M
Gibson SJ
Source :
European journal of pain (London, England) [Eur J Pain] 2015 Jul; Vol. 19 (6), pp. 807-16. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Nov 07.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: Through two studies, we introduce and validate the Empathy for Pain Scale (EPS), which characterizes the phenomenology of empathy for pain, including the vicarious experience of pain when seeing others in pain.<br />Methods: In study 1, 406 individuals completed the EPS and Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI). In the EPS, four painful scenarios (witnessing surgery, patient recovering from surgery, assault and accidental injury) were rated for 12 emotional, empathic and sensory responses. In study 2, 59 participants completed the same questionnaires and then watched and rated videos of sporting injuries.<br />Results: In study 1, we identified three factors of the EPS with principal component analysis, which were validated with confirmatory factor analysis: affective distress; vicarious pain; and empathic concern. The EPS demonstrated good psychometric properties, re-test reliability (nā€‰=ā€‰105) and concurrent validity. In study 2, we validated the EPS against empathic reactions to the pain of others as displayed in video clips depicting sporting injuries and showed that the scale has unique utility to characterize empathic reactions to pain above general trait empathy measures. Both studies showed that the affective distress and empathic concern subscales of the EPS correlated with measures of cognitive and affective empathy from the IRI, whereas the vicarious pain subscale was only correlated with the personal distress IRI subscale.<br />Conclusions: The EPS is a psychometrically sound new scale that characterizes empathy for pain and vicarious pain. The EPS offers valuable insight to the phenomenological profile of the affective, empathic and sensory dimensions of empathy for pain.<br /> (© 2014 European Pain Federation - EFIC®)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-2149
Volume :
19
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of pain (London, England)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25380353
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ejp.607