Measurement of empathy among health professionals during Syrian crisis using the Syrian empathy scale

Abstract Background Health professionals should have certain degree of empathy to eliminate the pain and suffering of their patients. There is a need to design a scale, which can assess empathy among health professionals and is relevant to community and culture. Therefore, this study was undertaken...

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Main Authors: Mayssoon Dashash, Mounzer Boubou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02835-0
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spelling doaj-4013373fca87449a9c12b44f5cd50b452021-08-01T11:46:10ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202021-07-0121111010.1186/s12909-021-02835-0Measurement of empathy among health professionals during Syrian crisis using the Syrian empathy scaleMayssoon Dashash0Mounzer Boubou1Faculty of Dentistry, Damascus UniversityProgram of Medical Education, Syrian Virtual UniversityAbstract Background Health professionals should have certain degree of empathy to eliminate the pain and suffering of their patients. There is a need to design a scale, which can assess empathy among health professionals and is relevant to community and culture. Therefore, this study was undertaken to measure the empathy among Syrian health professionals and students of health professions using a newly designed Syrian Empathy Scale that is relevant to community during Syrian crisis. Methods A cross-sectional observational study was undertaken. A total of 214 participants (118 males and 96 females) responded to the Syrian Empathy Scale SES from Medical (n = 62), Dental (n = 152). They were 59 undergraduates, 116 postgraduates and 39 general practitioners. The SES was designed as a tool that includes 20 items in a 7-point Likert-type scale with overall score ranges from 20 to 140. Group comparisons of the empathy scores were conducted using t-test and analysis of variance (ANOVA). A factor analysis was performed. Bartlett’s test of the sphericity and the KMO measure of sampling adequacy were also determined. Cronbach’s alpha was calculated. Results A significant difference was found between males and females in the SES mean score. The ANOVA analysis showed that the SES empathy scores of dentists were higher than the SES empathy scores in medical doctors with no significant difference. The SES empathy score of undergraduates was significantly higher than postgraduates and practitioners. Findings of KMO indicated sampling adequacy (KMO = 0.824 > 0.7) and the value of Bartlett’s test of the sphericity (1255.65, df = 190, P-value< 0.001) proved that the factor analysis is meaningful and acceptable. The results of varimax rotation proved that five main factors were retained. Conclusion Findings of this study support the reliability of the newly designed Syrian Empathy Scale for measuring empathy in the field of health care. The SES can be suggested for assessing empathy in different health educational programs. However, future works are still essential to support the validity of the scale as well as to ascertain the role of empathy in improving health care.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02835-0AttitudeEmpathyMeasurementSyriaHealth professionalStudent
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mayssoon Dashash
Mounzer Boubou
spellingShingle Mayssoon Dashash
Mounzer Boubou
Measurement of empathy among health professionals during Syrian crisis using the Syrian empathy scale
BMC Medical Education
Attitude
Empathy
Measurement
Syria
Health professional
Student
author_facet Mayssoon Dashash
Mounzer Boubou
author_sort Mayssoon Dashash
title Measurement of empathy among health professionals during Syrian crisis using the Syrian empathy scale
title_short Measurement of empathy among health professionals during Syrian crisis using the Syrian empathy scale
title_full Measurement of empathy among health professionals during Syrian crisis using the Syrian empathy scale
title_fullStr Measurement of empathy among health professionals during Syrian crisis using the Syrian empathy scale
title_full_unstemmed Measurement of empathy among health professionals during Syrian crisis using the Syrian empathy scale
title_sort measurement of empathy among health professionals during syrian crisis using the syrian empathy scale
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Background Health professionals should have certain degree of empathy to eliminate the pain and suffering of their patients. There is a need to design a scale, which can assess empathy among health professionals and is relevant to community and culture. Therefore, this study was undertaken to measure the empathy among Syrian health professionals and students of health professions using a newly designed Syrian Empathy Scale that is relevant to community during Syrian crisis. Methods A cross-sectional observational study was undertaken. A total of 214 participants (118 males and 96 females) responded to the Syrian Empathy Scale SES from Medical (n = 62), Dental (n = 152). They were 59 undergraduates, 116 postgraduates and 39 general practitioners. The SES was designed as a tool that includes 20 items in a 7-point Likert-type scale with overall score ranges from 20 to 140. Group comparisons of the empathy scores were conducted using t-test and analysis of variance (ANOVA). A factor analysis was performed. Bartlett’s test of the sphericity and the KMO measure of sampling adequacy were also determined. Cronbach’s alpha was calculated. Results A significant difference was found between males and females in the SES mean score. The ANOVA analysis showed that the SES empathy scores of dentists were higher than the SES empathy scores in medical doctors with no significant difference. The SES empathy score of undergraduates was significantly higher than postgraduates and practitioners. Findings of KMO indicated sampling adequacy (KMO = 0.824 > 0.7) and the value of Bartlett’s test of the sphericity (1255.65, df = 190, P-value< 0.001) proved that the factor analysis is meaningful and acceptable. The results of varimax rotation proved that five main factors were retained. Conclusion Findings of this study support the reliability of the newly designed Syrian Empathy Scale for measuring empathy in the field of health care. The SES can be suggested for assessing empathy in different health educational programs. However, future works are still essential to support the validity of the scale as well as to ascertain the role of empathy in improving health care.
topic Attitude
Empathy
Measurement
Syria
Health professional
Student
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-021-02835-0
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