Abstract

Knowledge about aging (KA) and empathy affect nursing students’ attitudes toward older adults. However, little is known about the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon from an integrated, person-centered perspective. The purposes of the present study were (1) to identify empathy profiles based on the Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI) among Chinese nursing students and (2) to explore whether these latent empathy profiles moderate the association between KA and attitudes toward older people. A cross-sectional survey design was used, and a battery of questionnaires – including those on demographic information, the Chinese version of Palmore’s Facts on Aging Quiz (C-FAQ), the Chinese version of Kogan’s Attitude Toward Older People Scale (C-KAOP), and the IRI – was filled in by 622 Chinese nursing students (Mage 21.76; SD = 1.33). The mean total scores on KAOP and C-FAQ were 164.96 ± 18.32 and 10.436 ± 3.015, respectively, indicating relatively positive attitudes toward older people but low KA among Chinese nursing students. Latent profile analysis was used to identify a three-profile solution characterized by distinct levels of four dimensions of empathy, namely average empathy (AE, n = 399), high empathy (HE, n = 42), and low empathy (LE, n = 181). Subsequent linear regression analysis revealed that the LE rather than the HE profile predicted positive attitudes toward older adults. It is worth noting that the LE profile played a remarkable moderating role in associations between KA and negative attitudes toward older adults after controlling for covariant variables. Both the identification of distinct empathy profiles and the interplay between the LE profile and KA are of significance in reducing negative attitudes toward older adults among Chinese nursing students. Nursing educators should combine improving nursing students’ levels of KA and fostering greater empathy to reduce negative attitudes toward older adults. Such training should give priority to nursing students with LE.

Highlights

  • The proportion of the global population that is elderly is increasing rapidly, especially in China, which accounts for onefifth of the world’s population

  • PT, empathic concern (EC), FS, and knowledge of geriatrics were significantly positively associated with KAOP

  • The present study aimed to identify the latent profiles of empathy based on Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI) among nursing students and to examine the extent to which empathy profiles moderate the relationship between knowledge about aging and attitude toward older adults

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Summary

Introduction

The proportion of the global population that is elderly is increasing rapidly, especially in China, which accounts for onefifth of the world’s population. In 2010, it was estimated that older people accounted for 8.2% of the population of China, and this figure is expected to increase to 23.9–26.9% of the total population by 2050 (Zeng, 2012). The growing number of older adults means that more healthcare providers will be needed, among whom nurses make up the largest proportion. Nurses, including nursing students (who constitute a powerful reserve workforce), need to be equipped with professional knowledge about aging (KA) and skills and with positive attitudes toward older adults. The latter is considered a key target for healthy aging (Rush et al, 2017)

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