Abstract
BackgroundMany medical schools state that empathy is important and have curricular learning outcomes covering its teaching. It is thought to be useful in team-working, good bedside manner, patient perspective taking, and improved patient care. Given this, one might expect it to be measured in assessment processes. Despite this, there is relatively little literature exploring how measures of empathy in final clinical examinations in medical school map onto other examination scores. Little is known about simulated patient (actors) rating of empathy in examinations in terms of inter-rater reliability compared with clinical assessors or correlation with overall examination results.MethodsExaminers in final year clinical assessments in one UK medical school rated 133 students on five constructs in Objective Structured Long Examination Record (OSLER) with real patients: gathering information, physical examination, problem solving, managing the diagnosis, and relationship with the patient. Scores were based on a standardized well-established penalty point system. In separate Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) stations, different examiners used the same penalty point system to score performance in both interactional and procedural stations. In the four interaction-based OSCE stations, examiners and simulated patient actors also independently rated empathy of the students.ResultsThe OSLER score, based on penalty points, had a correlation of −0.38 with independent ratings of empathy from the interactional OSCE stations. The intra-class correlation (a measure of inter-rater reliability) between the observing clinical tutor and ratings from simulated patients was 0.645 with very similar means. There was a significant difference between the empathy scores of the 94 students passing the first part of the sequential examination, based on combined OSCE and OSLER scores (which did not include the empathy scores), and 39 students with sufficient penalty points to trigger attendance for the second part (Cohen’s d = 0.81).ConclusionsThese findings suggest that empathy ratings are related to clinical performance as measured by independent examiners. Simulated patient actors are able to give clinically meaningful assessment scores. This gives preliminary evidence that such empathy ratings could be useful for formative learning, and bolsters the call for more research to test whether they are robust enough to be used summatively.
Highlights
Many medical schools state that empathy is important and have curricular learning outcomes covering its teaching
Empathy scores on each Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) station were given by the clinical tutor and the simulated patient
There was no correlation between empathy scores and penalty points on the two procedural skill based OSCE station scores
Summary
Many medical schools state that empathy is important and have curricular learning outcomes covering its teaching. There is relatively little literature exploring how measures of empathy in final clinical examinations in medical school map onto other examination scores. The medical student admissions process frequently involves attempts at the assessment of empathy [1,2]. Stepien and Baernstein [3] describe the importance of different elements of empathy They suggest that in clinical careers there is a need for more than cognitive empathy, defined as the intellectual understanding of another’s perspectives, because high levels of clinical competence require affective empathy, an emotional understanding and engagement with the patient. It is likely to be important for good team-working, good bedside manner and the ability to develop helpful therapeutic alliances, leading to better patient care [9,10]. Medical students’ wellbeing appears to be better, with lower levels of distress and possibly burnout when they have a good ability to empathize [15,16]
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