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Journal ArticleDOI

Teaching empathy to first year medical students: evaluation of an elective literature and medicine course.

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TLDR
A brief literature-based course can contribute to greater student empathy and appreciation for the value of humanities in medical education.
Abstract
Background: Empathy is critical to the development of professionalism in medical students, and the humanities-particularly literature-have been touted as an effective tool for increasing student empathy. This quantitative/qualitative study was undertaken to assess whether reading and discussing poetry and prose related to patients and doctors could significantly increase medical student empathy and appreciation of the relevance of the humanities for their own professional development. Method: In 2000-2001, first year students (n = 22) volunteered for an eight-session literature and medicine elective and were randomly assigned to either immediate participation in the class or a wait-list group, who participated in the same class 6 months later. Complete pre- and post-intervention data for 16 students from both groups were obtained for two quantitative measures of empathy and an attitudes-toward-the- humanities scale. Students also participated in a qualitative group interview pre- and post-intervention. Results: Empathy and attitudes toward the humanities improved significantly (p 5 0.01) after participation in the class when both groups of students were combined. The scaled treatment effect size was in the moderate range ( 5 0.60 standard deviation units) for both measures that had statistically significant pre-to-post changes. Furthermore, student understanding of the patient's perspective became more detailed and complex after the intervention. Students were also more likely post-intervention to note ways reading literature could help them cope with training-related stress. Conclusion: A brief literature-based course can contribute to greater student empathy and appreciation for the value of humanities in medical education.

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Citations
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Educating for empathy

TL;DR: These studies indicate that empathy may be amenable to positive change with a range of interventional strategies, and larger studies using validated measurement tools are recommended.
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Teaching Empathy to Medical Students: An Updated, Systematic Review

TL;DR: It is suggested that educational interventions can be effective in maintaining and enhancing empathy in undergraduate medical students and highlighted the need for multicenter, randomized controlled trials, reporting long-term data to evaluate the longevity of intervention effects.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Basics of qualitative research : grounded theory procedures and techniques

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the uses of literature and open coding techniques for enhancing theoretical sensitivity of theoretical studies, and give guidelines for judging a grounded theory study.
Book

Designing Qualitative Research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an approach for recording, managing, and analyzing data in the context of qualitative research, defending the value and logic of research, and managing time and resources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures and techniques

TL;DR: Reading a book as this basics of qualitative research grounded theory procedures and techniques and other references can enrich your life quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Doing Qualitative Research

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A brief literature-based course can contribute to greater student empathy and appreciation for the value of humanities in medical education.