Lane Charles B, Brauer Erin, Mascaro Jennifer S
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, United States.
Department of Spiritual Health, Emory University Woodruff Health Sciences Center, Emory Healthcare, Atlanta, GA, United States.
Front Psychol. 2023 Jun 28;14:1184032. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1184032. eCollection 2023.
Compassion is considered a fundamental human capacity instrumental to the creation of medicine and for patient-centered practice and innovations in healthcare. However, instead of nurturing and cultivating institutional compassion, many healthcare providers cite the health system itself as a direct barrier to standard care. The trend of compassion depletion begins with medical students and is often attributed to the culture of undergraduate medical training, where students experience an increased risk of depression, substance use, and suicidality.
This qualitative study aims to develop a more comprehensive understanding of compassion as it relates to undergraduate medical education. We used focus groups with key stakeholders in medical education to characterize beliefs about the nature of compassion and to identify perceived barriers and facilitators to compassion within their daily responsibilities as educators and students.
Researchers conducted a series of virtual (Zoom) focus groups with stakeholders: Students ( = 14), Small Group Advisors ( = 11), and Medical Curriculum Leaders ( = 4). Transcripts were thematically analyzed using MAXQDA software.
Study participants described compassion as being more than empathy, demanding action, and capable of being cultivated. Stakeholders identified self-care, life experiences, and role models as facilitators. The consistently identified barriers to compassion were time constraints, culture, and burnout. Both medical students and those training them agreed on a general definition of compassion and that there are ways to cultivate more of it in their daily professional lives. They also agreed that undergraduate medical education - and the healthcare culture at large - does not deliberately foster compassion and may be directly contributing to its degradation by the content and pedagogies emphasized, the high rates of burnout and futility, and the overwhelming time constraints.
Intentional instruction in and cultivation of compassion during undergraduate medical education could provide a critical first step for undergirding the professional culture of healthcare with more resilience and warm-hearted concern. Our finding that medical students and those training them agree about what compassion is and that there are specific and actionable ways to cultivate more of it in their professional lives highlights key changes that will promote a more compassionate training environment conducive to the experience and expression of compassion.
同情心被视为一种基本的人类能力,对医学的创立以及以患者为中心的医疗实践和医疗保健创新至关重要。然而,许多医疗服务提供者并未培养和培育机构同情心,反而将医疗系统本身视为标准护理的直接障碍。同情心耗竭的趋势始于医学生,通常归因于本科医学培训的文化,在这种文化中,学生经历抑郁、物质使用和自杀倾向增加的风险。
这项定性研究旨在更全面地理解同情心与本科医学教育的关系。我们使用焦点小组与医学教育的关键利益相关者进行讨论,以描述对同情心本质的信念,并确定在他们作为教育者和学生的日常职责中,对同情心的感知障碍和促进因素。
研究人员与利益相关者进行了一系列虚拟(Zoom)焦点小组讨论:学生(n = 14)、小组顾问(n = 11)和医学课程领导者(n = 4)。使用MAXQDA软件对转录本进行主题分析。
研究参与者将同情心描述为不仅仅是同理心,需要行动,并且能够培养。利益相关者将自我护理、生活经历和榜样视为促进因素。一致确定的同情心障碍是时间限制、文化和职业倦怠。医学生和培训他们的人都同意同情心的一般定义,并且在他们的日常职业生活中有方法可以培养更多的同情心。他们还同意,本科医学教育——以及整个医疗保健文化——并没有刻意培养同情心,可能通过所强调的内容和教学方法、高职业倦怠率和徒劳感以及压倒性的时间限制,直接导致同情心的退化。
在本科医学教育期间有意进行同情心的教学和培养,可能是为医疗保健的专业文化奠定更具韧性和热心关怀基础的关键第一步。我们的研究发现,医学生和培训他们的人对同情心的定义达成一致,并且在他们的职业生活中有具体可行的方法来培养更多的同情心,这突出了将促进更具同情心的培训环境、有利于同情心体验和表达的关键变化。