Medical empathy in medical students in Madrid: A proposal for empathy level cut-off points for Spain.
Author: Blanco Canseco, José Manuel; Blanco Alfonso, Augusto; Caballero Martínez, Fernando; Hawkins Solıs, María Magdalena; Fernández Agullo, Teresa; Lledó García, Lourdes; López Román, Antonio; Piñas Mesa, Antonio; Vara Ameigeiras, Elena Maria; Monge Martín, Diana
Abstract: This study evaluates the degree of empathy among medical students and its influencing factors
at three critical moments of their degree studies (beginning of first year and end of third
and sixth years) as well as establishes low-, medium-, and high-empathy cut-off points to
obtain valid and reliable results that can be extrapolated to the general population. This
cross-sectional study of the eight (public and private) medical schools in the province of
Madrid, used an electronic questionnaire with the Jefferson Scale of Empathy (JSE), Medical
Student Well-Being Index, and other independent characteristics as measuring instruments.
Of the 2,264 student participants, 1,679 (74.0%) were women, with a 50.7%
participation rate. No significant differences were found in empathy levels by academic
year. Regarding range, percentile and cut-off point tables were established to identify students
with high, medium, and low empathy levels. Women (p<0.001), volunteer workers
(p<0.001), and those preferring general specialties (internal medicine, psychiatry, pediatrics,
or family medicine) scored higher on the JSE (p<0.02). Moreover, 41.6% presented
high level of psychological distress. Women reported a lower well-being level and a higher
risk of psychological distress (p = 0.004). In sum, the empathy of medical students in Madrid
did not differ among the three critical moments of their university studies. The established
cut-off points could be taken into account when accessing the medical degree and identifying
students with low levels of empathy to implement curricular interventions to rectify this
perceived deficiency. There was a high percentage of medical students with high levels of
psychological distress.
Universal identifier: https://hdl.handle.net/10641/3317
Date: 2022
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