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Engendering Empathy in Baccalaureate Nursing Students

Recent nursing research suggests that empathy in nursing students actually declines as students progress through their nursing program of study; with the lowest levels of empathy observed in nursing students with the most clinical experience. This study explored the effect of an elective nursing cou...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of caring sciences 2013-09, Vol.6 (3), p.456
Main Authors: Sheehan, Caryn A, Perrin, Kathleen O, Potter, Mertie L, Kazanowski, Mary K, Bennett, Laurie A
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Recent nursing research suggests that empathy in nursing students actually declines as students progress through their nursing program of study; with the lowest levels of empathy observed in nursing students with the most clinical experience. This study explored the effect of an elective nursing course about the many dimensions of human suffering on empathy in baccalaureate nursing students. The pre-test/posttest design was repeated five times over five years. Despite previous evidence that suggests that empathy declines during nursing education, in this study undergraduate nursing students scored higher on the Jefferson Scale of Empathy, Nursing Student Version R after completing the course. In addition these positive findings were replicated consistently over a five year period. Collectively students scored about seven points higher after completing the course. In an era when communication is technologically driven, nursing curricula requirements abound, and nursing students are focused on high stakes testing, the need for nurse educators to focus on engendering empathy may be more important than ever.
ISSN:1791-5201
1792-037X