Empathy as related to gender, age, race and ethnicity, academic background and career interest: A nationwide study of osteopathic medical students in the United States.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Empathy as related to gender, age, race and ethnicity, academic background and career interest: A nationwide study of osteopathic medical students in the United States.
Authors: Hojat, Mohammadreza, DeSantis, Jennifer, Shannon, Stephen C., Speicher, Mark R., Bragan, Lynn, Calabrese, Leonard H.
Source: Medical Education. Jun2020, Vol. 54 Issue 6, p571-581. 11p. 4 Charts.
Subjects: Age distribution, Black people, Empathy, Ethnic groups, Hispanic Americans, Medical education, Medical students, Osteopathic medicine, Questionnaires, Race, Sex distribution, Surveys, Vocational guidance
Geographic Terms: United States
Abstract: Context: Research on associations between medical student empathy and demographics, academic background and career interest is limited, lacks representative samples and suffers from single institutional features. This study was designed to fill the gap by examining associations between empathy in patient care, and gender, age, race and ethnicity, academic background and career interest in nationwide, multi‐institutional samples of medical students in the United States and to provide more definitive answers regarding the aforementioned associations, with more confidence in the internal and external validity of the findings. Methods: Four nationwide samples participated in this study (n = 10 751). Samples 1, 2, 3 and 4 included 3616 first‐year, 2764 second‐year, 2413 third‐year and 1958 fourth‐year students who completed a web‐based survey at the end of the 2017‐2018 academic year. The survey included questions on demographics, academic background and career interest, the Jefferson Scale of Empathy, and the Infrequency Scale of the Zuckerman‐Kuhlman Personality Questionnaire to control for the effect of 'good impression' response bias. Results: Statistically significant and practically important associations were found between empathy scores and gender (in favour of women), race and ethnicity (in favour of African‐American and Hispanic/Latino/Spanish), academic background (in favour of 'Social and Behavioural Sciences' and 'Arts and Humanities' in Samples 1 and 2) and career interest (in favour of 'People‐Oriented' and 'Psychiatry' specialties). Conclusions: Special features of this study (eg, nationwide representative samples, use of a validated instrument for measuring empathy in patient care, statistical control for the effect of 'good impression' response bias, and consistency of findings in different samples from multiple institutions) provide more definitive answers to the issue of correlates of empathy in medical students and increase our confidence in the validity, reliability and generalisability of the results. Findings have implications for career counselling and targeting students who need more guidance to enhance their empathic orientation. Using four nationwide samples of medical students in the US the authors explore correlates of empathy to explore strategies for career counselling and empathy development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
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