Ünlü Gazi, Uludağ Ayhan
Department of Health Care Management, Faculty of Health Sciences, Necmettin Erbakan University, Konya, Turkey.
Teach Learn Med. 2021 Jan-Mar;33(1):49-57. doi: 10.1080/10401334.2020.1794881. Epub 2020 Aug 11.
Empathy has a potentially complicated relationship with dealing with death and dying. Having clinical empathy can improve interactions with dying, but educational interventions aimed at fostering empathy may cause medical students to connect emotionally with dying patients and behave unprofessionally out of self-defense. Cognitively-based clinical empathy should lead to positive attitudes toward death and dying by adhering to the principles of detached concern and professionalism. The main components of cognitively-based clinical empathy are negatively correlated with (1) difficulty communicating with dying patients and their relatives, and (2) avoidance of death and dying. This cross-sectional study included 372 medical students from two universities in Konya, Turkey. Data were collected via a survey consisting of three parts: socio-demographic information, the Turkish version of Jefferson Scale of Empathy-Student Version (JSE-S), and the Turkish Approach to Death and Dying Patients Attitude Scale. Independent samples t-test and one-way analysis of variance were used for comparative analysis. Bivariate and partial correlation analyses were used to assess the associations between variables. Perspective-taking and compassionate care were significantly and moderately positively correlated with difficulty communicating with the dying and their relatives. Perspective-taking and compassionate care had significant, but weak positive correlations with avoiding death and dying. There was no significant correlation between standing in the patient's shoes and either communication or avoidance. Both hypotheses were rejected. The present findings raise questions regarding whether the JSE-S is an effective operationalization of cognitively-based clinical empathy. Perspective-taking and compassionate care as measured by the JSE-S may reflect a propensity to engaging emotionally that leads to negative attitudes toward death and dying in medical students. If so, reducing the negative effects of emotional engagement seems crucial for developing positive attitudes toward death and dying in medical students.
同理心与应对死亡和濒死状态之间可能存在复杂的关系。具备临床同理心能够改善与濒死患者的互动,但旨在培养同理心的教育干预措施可能会使医学生在情感上与濒死患者产生连接,并出于自我保护而做出不专业的行为。基于认知的临床同理心应通过坚持超脱关注和专业精神的原则,引导对死亡和濒死状态持积极态度。基于认知的临床同理心的主要组成部分与以下两方面呈负相关:(1)与濒死患者及其亲属沟通困难;(2)回避死亡和濒死状态。这项横断面研究纳入了来自土耳其科尼亚两所大学的372名医学生。数据通过一项包含三个部分的调查收集:社会人口统计学信息、土耳其语版的杰斐逊同理心量表学生版(JSE-S)以及土耳其语版的对待死亡和濒死患者态度量表。采用独立样本t检验和单因素方差分析进行比较分析。使用双变量和偏相关分析来评估变量之间的关联。观点采择和同情关怀与与濒死患者及其亲属沟通困难呈显著且中等程度的正相关。观点采择和同情关怀与回避死亡和濒死状态呈显著但较弱的正相关。设身处地为患者着想与沟通困难或回避之间均无显著相关性。两个假设均被拒绝。目前的研究结果引发了关于JSE-S是否是基于认知的临床同理心的有效操作化的问题。JSE-S所测量的观点采择和同情关怀可能反映了一种情感投入倾向,这种倾向会导致医学生对死亡和濒死状态持消极态度。如果是这样,减少情感投入的负面影响对于培养医学生对死亡和濒死状态的积极态度似乎至关重要。