Doctoral School of Education, University of Szeged, Hungary.
Institute of Psychology, University of Szeged, Hungary.
Int J Med Educ. 2024 Sep 26;15:113-123. doi: 10.5116/ijme.66dd.beb3.
We aimed to explore healthcare students' intercultural sensitivity profiles and their relationship with empathy to develop effective education methods that promote non-discriminatory patient care.
We conducted a cross-sectional questionnaire study, involving a total of 508 international (n= 100) and local (n= 408) healthcare students in Hungary by convenience sampling. The survey included demographics, the Intercultural Sensitivity Scale, and the Interpersonal Reactivity Index. We applied latent profile analysis to identify distinct sensitivity profiles and used multinomial logistic regression to estimate the predictive power of several background variables on profile group membership.
A four-profile solution emerged: "Interculturally average" (n= 241), "Interculturally uncertain" (n= 76), "Interculturally sensitive" (n= 132), and "Interculturally refusing" (n= 54). The model (R= 0.123; p= 0.001) revealed that psychology major tended to predict "uncertain" group membership (OR= 0.56, p= 0.08) and higher personal distress was a significant predictor of this group (OR=1.11, p= 0.002). Male gender (OR= 3.03, p= 0.001), medicine major (OR= 5.49, p= 0.01), lower perspective-taking (OR= 0.91, p= 0.007) and higher personal distress (OR= 1.09, p= 0.028) were identified as predictors of "refusing" group membership, compared to the "average" group.
By exploring the ways students experience intercultural situations, a more personalized medical education can be developed with a special focus on vulnerable subgroups. For the "uncertain" group, the focus should be more on developing confidence, and intercultural experiences, whereas in the "refusing" group on strengthening empathy. In general, it can be useful to create mixed-gender, multidisciplinary, and intercultural learning environments.
本研究旨在探讨医学生的跨文化敏感性特征及其与同理心的关系,以探索有效的教育方法,促进对患者无歧视的护理。
我们采用便利抽样法,对匈牙利的 508 名国际(n=100)和本地(n=408)医学生进行了横断面问卷调查。该调查包括人口统计学资料、跨文化敏感性量表和人际反应指数。我们应用潜在剖面分析来确定不同的敏感性特征,并使用多项逻辑回归估计几个背景变量对特征群体成员身份的预测能力。
本研究确定了四个特征群体:“跨文化平均”(n=241)、“跨文化不确定”(n=76)、“跨文化敏感”(n=132)和“跨文化拒绝”(n=54)。模型(R=0.123;p=0.001)表明,心理学专业更倾向于预测“不确定”群体的成员身份(OR=0.56,p=0.08),较高的个人困扰是该群体的显著预测因素(OR=1.11,p=0.002)。与“平均”组相比,男性(OR=3.03,p=0.001)、医学专业(OR=5.49,p=0.01)、较低的观点采择(OR=0.91,p=0.007)和较高的个人困扰(OR=1.09,p=0.028)被确定为“拒绝”群体成员身份的预测因素。
通过探索学生体验跨文化情境的方式,可以为医学生开发更具个性化的医学教育,特别关注弱势群体。对于“不确定”群体,重点应放在培养信心和跨文化体验上,而对于“拒绝”群体,则应加强同理心。总体而言,创建混合性别、多学科和跨文化的学习环境可能会有所帮助。