Back to Search Start Over

Beyond empathy decline: Do the barriers to compassion change across medical training?

Authors :
Clair X. Y. Wang
Alina Pavlova
Antonio T. Fernando
Nathan S. Consedine
Source :
Advances in Health Sciences Education. 27:521-536
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Background: Despite being a mandated, foundational value in healthcare, research on compassion remains limited. Studying the individual, patient, clinical, and contextual factors that interfere with compassion—the “barriers”—may clarify our understanding of the origins of compassion and identify potential targets for improving patient-centred care. Studies of the related construct of empathy have suggested that medical students report declines with increasing clinical experience. In contrast, when comparing physicians with medical students, increased clinical experience predicts lower barriers to compassion. Whether—and how—a similar experience-related decline in the factors that interfere with compassion occurs across medical training remains unknown.Aims: To describe how the barriers to compassion vary across clinical training in medical students.Method: New Zealand medical students (N = 351) in their clinical years (Years 4–6) completed measures of the Barriers to Physician Compassion (BPCQ) and potential covariates such as demographics, work burden factors, and dispositional factors. The BPCQ indexes the extent to which barriers in four domains (individual, patient, clinical, and contextual) interfere with a physician/student’s compassion towards patients. Analyses of variance and regression analyses were used to explore the effect of year level on the four types of barriers.Results: Year 4 students reported slightly lower student-related, environmental and patient/family-related (but not clinical) barriers than Year 6 students (effect size: ɷ2 Conclusions: In extending studies of empathy decline, this report suggests that students experience higher barriers to compassion as clinical training progresses. This is in contrast to existing studies contrasting physicians with medical students, where greater experience was associated with lower perceived barriers to compassion. Self-compassion may offset increases in barriers to care.

Details

ISSN :
15731677 and 13824996
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in Health Sciences Education
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....48fe852971413fb40a5ffd07e328d160