Abstract

There is growing concern about a potential decline in empathy among medical students over time. Despite the importance of empathy toward patients in medicine, it remains unclear the nature of the changes in empathy among medical students. Thus, we systematically investigated affective and cognitive empathy for patients among medical students using neuroscientific approach. Nineteen medical students who completed their fifth-year medical curriculum and 23 age- and sex-matched nonmedical students participated in a functional magnetic resonance imaging study. Inside a brain scanner, all participants read empathy-eliciting scenarios while adopting either the patient or doctor perspective. Brain activation and self-reported ratings during the experience of empathy were obtained. Behavioral results indicated that all participants reported greater emotional negativity and empathic concern in association with the patient perspective condition than with the doctor perspective condition. Functional brain imaging results indicated that neural activity in the posterior superior temporal region implicated in goal-relevant attention reorienting was overall increased under the patient perspective than the doctor perspective condition. Relative to nonmedical students, medical students showed decreased activity in the temporoparietal region implicated in mentalizing under the patient perspective versus doctor perspective condition. Notably, this same region showed increased activity under the doctor versus patient condition in medical students relative to nonmedical students. This study is among the first to investigate the neural mechanisms of empathy among medical students and the current findings point to the cognitive empathy system as the locus of the primary brain differences associated with empathy toward patients.

Highlights

  • Empathy of physicians for their patients is associated with improved healthcare quality and patient outcomes as well as the well-being of physicians themselves (Decety & Fotopoulou, 2015; Underman & Hirshfield, 2016)

  • Nurses with longer work experience reported reduced emotional negativity and arousal when observing pain in the hospital context; but this relationship was not found in the home context. These findings suggest that experience-dependent desensitization of empathic responses to the pain of others is greater in the context matching that experience, and that the neural substrates of affective and cognitive empathy are differentially influenced by the situational context

  • The current study aimed to examine the differences in behavioral and neural measures of empathic responses between medical and nonmedical students and how these responses were altered by adopting different perspectives

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Summary

Introduction

Empathy of physicians for their patients is associated with improved healthcare quality and patient outcomes as well as the well-being of physicians themselves (Decety & Fotopoulou, 2015; Underman & Hirshfield, 2016). Some studies found no change in empathy (Costa et al, 2013; Hegazi et al, 2017), whereas others found an increase in empathy over the course of medical training (Kataoka et al, 2012; Smith et al, 2017). Empathy is a multifaceted psychological construct, and empathy tasks used in prior studies differ with regard to the extent to which they elicit different components of empathic response Such tasks may elicit cognitive vs affective aspects of empathy to varying degrees, and in the extent to which emotional responses reflect empathic concern (i.e., emotions felt for the others) vs self-oriented responses (e.g., focusing on one’s own feelings of distress; Batson, 2009). A social neuroscientific approach to empathy enables systematic investigation of the brain mechanisms that underlie these various aspects of empathy (Decety & Jackson, 2006; Shamay-Tsoory et al, 2009; Singer & Lamm, 2009)

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