Civic-Mindedness Sustains Empathy in a Cohort of Physical Therapy Students: A Pilot Cohort Study

Background: Empathy is critical to patient-centered care and thus is a valued trait in graduate health-care students. The relationship between empathy and civic-mindedness in health professions has not previously been explored. Objectives: (a) To determine whether significant differences occurred on...

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Main Authors: Kerstin M Palombaro PT, PhD, CAPS, Jill D Black PT, DPT, EdD, Robin L Dole PT, DPT, EdD, PCS, Sidney A Jones BA, Alexander R Stewart BA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-04-01
Series:Journal of Patient Experience
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373519837246
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spelling doaj-7ec2c1153cf648b397b37b8d9bb1c2c82020-11-25T04:10:52ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Patient Experience2374-37352374-37432020-04-01710.1177/2374373519837246Civic-Mindedness Sustains Empathy in a Cohort of Physical Therapy Students: A Pilot Cohort StudyKerstin M Palombaro PT, PhD, CAPS0Jill D Black PT, DPT, EdD1Robin L Dole PT, DPT, EdD, PCS2Sidney A Jones BA3Alexander R Stewart BA4 Institute for Physical Therapy Education, Widener University, One University Place, Chester, PA, USA Institute for Physical Therapy Education, Widener University, One University Place, Chester, PA, USA School of Human Service Professions, Widener University, Chester, PA, USA Institute for Physical Therapy Education, Widener University, One University Place, Chester, PA, USA Institute for Physical Therapy Education, Widener University, One University Place, Chester, PA, USABackground: Empathy is critical to patient-centered care and thus is a valued trait in graduate health-care students. The relationship between empathy and civic-mindedness in health professions has not previously been explored. Objectives: (a) To determine whether significant differences occurred on the Jefferson Scale for Empathy–Health Professions Student Version (JSE-HPS) and Civic-Minded Professional scale (CMP) and its subscales across the curriculum, (b) to explore a potential relationship between civic-mindedness and empathy in a cohort of graduate physical therapy (PT) students at regular intervals, and (c) to explore the predictive ability of civic-mindedness on empathy scores. Methods: This study was a convenience sample of a cohort of 48 PT students who completed both the JSE-HPS and the CMP at 4 points of a service-learning intensive curriculum. Statistical analysis included descriptive statistics, a Friedman’s analysis of variance with Wilcoxon signed-ranks post hoc testing, and Spearman correlations with stepwise linear regressions. Results: Statistically significant differences were not found for the JSE-HPS. Civic-Minded Professional scores increased across the curriculum. The JSE-HPS, the CMP, and various CMP subscales were significantly correlated. The JSE-HPS pretest scores were predictive of the year 1 and 2 posttest JSE-HPS scores. Conclusion: This study’s findings indicate that service-learning and the resulting development of civic-mindedness supports empathy. Programs could use JSE-HPS pretests to identify individual graduate students need for empathy mentorship upon program entrance or as one admission criterion.https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373519837246
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kerstin M Palombaro PT, PhD, CAPS
Jill D Black PT, DPT, EdD
Robin L Dole PT, DPT, EdD, PCS
Sidney A Jones BA
Alexander R Stewart BA
spellingShingle Kerstin M Palombaro PT, PhD, CAPS
Jill D Black PT, DPT, EdD
Robin L Dole PT, DPT, EdD, PCS
Sidney A Jones BA
Alexander R Stewart BA
Civic-Mindedness Sustains Empathy in a Cohort of Physical Therapy Students: A Pilot Cohort Study
Journal of Patient Experience
author_facet Kerstin M Palombaro PT, PhD, CAPS
Jill D Black PT, DPT, EdD
Robin L Dole PT, DPT, EdD, PCS
Sidney A Jones BA
Alexander R Stewart BA
author_sort Kerstin M Palombaro PT, PhD, CAPS
title Civic-Mindedness Sustains Empathy in a Cohort of Physical Therapy Students: A Pilot Cohort Study
title_short Civic-Mindedness Sustains Empathy in a Cohort of Physical Therapy Students: A Pilot Cohort Study
title_full Civic-Mindedness Sustains Empathy in a Cohort of Physical Therapy Students: A Pilot Cohort Study
title_fullStr Civic-Mindedness Sustains Empathy in a Cohort of Physical Therapy Students: A Pilot Cohort Study
title_full_unstemmed Civic-Mindedness Sustains Empathy in a Cohort of Physical Therapy Students: A Pilot Cohort Study
title_sort civic-mindedness sustains empathy in a cohort of physical therapy students: a pilot cohort study
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Patient Experience
issn 2374-3735
2374-3743
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Background: Empathy is critical to patient-centered care and thus is a valued trait in graduate health-care students. The relationship between empathy and civic-mindedness in health professions has not previously been explored. Objectives: (a) To determine whether significant differences occurred on the Jefferson Scale for Empathy–Health Professions Student Version (JSE-HPS) and Civic-Minded Professional scale (CMP) and its subscales across the curriculum, (b) to explore a potential relationship between civic-mindedness and empathy in a cohort of graduate physical therapy (PT) students at regular intervals, and (c) to explore the predictive ability of civic-mindedness on empathy scores. Methods: This study was a convenience sample of a cohort of 48 PT students who completed both the JSE-HPS and the CMP at 4 points of a service-learning intensive curriculum. Statistical analysis included descriptive statistics, a Friedman’s analysis of variance with Wilcoxon signed-ranks post hoc testing, and Spearman correlations with stepwise linear regressions. Results: Statistically significant differences were not found for the JSE-HPS. Civic-Minded Professional scores increased across the curriculum. The JSE-HPS, the CMP, and various CMP subscales were significantly correlated. The JSE-HPS pretest scores were predictive of the year 1 and 2 posttest JSE-HPS scores. Conclusion: This study’s findings indicate that service-learning and the resulting development of civic-mindedness supports empathy. Programs could use JSE-HPS pretests to identify individual graduate students need for empathy mentorship upon program entrance or as one admission criterion.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373519837246
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