Froedtert & The Medical College of Wisconsin
FroedtertHealth
In Wisconsin, call
1-800-DOCTORS
Contact Us | News Room | Careers
For Professionals | For Employers
  • Froedtert Health Home
  • Froedtert
    Hospital
  • Community Memorial
    Hospital
  • St. Joseph's
    Hospital
  • Community &
    Specialty Clinics
Froedtert & The Medical College of Wisconsin
Find a Doctor
Diseases and Specialties
Locations & Directions
Patient Information
Visitor Information
Clinical Research
Donating and Volunteering
For Health Care Professionals
Health Resources
About Us
Diseases and Specialties Home
Directions to Campus
On-Campus Directions
Off-Campus Facilities
Froedtert Health Locations
Primary Care Clinics
Centers for Diagnostic Imaging (CDI)
New Clinics & Relocations
Transportation and Parking Services
Advance Directives
Appointments
Billing and Insurance
Contacting a Patient
Find a Doctor
Gift Shop
Inpatient Care
Medical Records
Patient and Family Services
Patient Safety
Pharmacy
Pre-Arrival
Privacy
CarePages
Contacting a Patient
Hours and Guidelines
Local Area Services
Services in the Hospital
Current Programs
Clinical Trials Basics
Translational Research Units
Recommended Resources
Froedtert Hospital Foundation
Volunteering
About Nursing
For EMS
For Physicians
Professional Education
Child Life Services
Classes and Events
e-Newsletters
Griefwords
Health Care Roundtable
Health Blogs
Health Podcasts
Just Drive!
Reading Room
Small Stones Wellness Center
Support Groups
Workforce Health Program
Academic Medical Center
Achievements and Recognition
Advanced Practice Nurses
For Our Suppliers
Our Commitment to Community
Our Physicians
Our Prices
Partnerships and Affiliations
Physician Assistants
Quality Care
Who We Are
Working at Froedtert
Home ) Health Resources ) Reading Room ) Health Blogs ) Reflections in a Head Mirror ) Empathy
Health Resources
Child Life Services
Classes and Events
e-Newsletters
Griefwords
Health Care Roundtable
Health Blogs
Health Podcasts
Just Drive!
Reading Room
Every Day
Froedtert Today
Other Publications
Incredible Stories
Commitment to Nursing
Health Blogs
Reflections in a Head Mirror
Archived Blogs
INERTIA: A Therapist's Thoughts
Pearls of Prevention
The Nerve Center
Subscribe to Print Publications
Small Stones Wellness Center
Support Groups
Workforce Health Program

Reflections in a Head Mirror

Reflections

3/11/2008

Empathy

“We know what we are, but know not what we may be.”
- Shakespeare  


Many years ago, I knew a resident whose only focus was himself. He studied alone, consistently begged off of or ignored teaching assignments, interacted poorly with faculty members, and received poor marks from those with whom he worked. Observing him examine patients was painful — he appeared to be completely unversed in basic social skills. When he finished training, memory of him quickly evaporated. It was as though he had never been part of our lives.  

What had he lacked? Many things, I suppose, but even he agreed that he lacked any sense of empathy.

Some empathy (“imaginative” or “cognitive” empathy) can be learned and it allows us to assume the roles of others to predict their thoughts and feelings. Other forms of empathy (“vicarious” or “gut reaction” empathy) represent the spontaneous visceral response to another’s emotions. Vicarious empathy cannot be learned but it can be lost.  

A recent article documents the disturbing association of medical education with decreases in vicarious empathy. Groups of medical students were tested yearly for four years for their emotional responses to fictional situations. Findings included:

  • Students entered medical school with vicarious empathy scores similar to the general public.
  • Vicarious empathy decreased over the four years of medical school, especially during the first and third years.
  • Students who eventually chose to enter specialties that focus on patient continuity (family medicine, pediatrics, internal medicine, OB/Gyn, and psychiatry) scored better on the empathy scale than students who eventually chose other specialties.
  • Separate research has found that idealism and empathy drop during internship.

The authors encourage medical schools to celebrate positive professional traits and focus on providing mentors who “can aid students in overcoming losses in empathy.” Not a simple task.  

Consider the process by which physicians are trained: How can students not be dramatically changed by what they experience? They are locked into competitive, cloistered, expensive, and demanding curricula, often far from friends and family. During the initial clinical years, students are expected to witness and rapidly process a steady onslaught of sickness, death, suffering, injustice, loss, uncertainty and pain. Teachers, who are themselves products of the system, may not have the skills or insight to help the students understand what is happening to the patients or to themselves.  

Not surprisingly, medical students are aware that the very process into which they have entered is capable of transforming naïve, altruistic, emotionally fragile college students into hardened, egocentric, cold physicians; I suspect that they all too often observe the disturbing results but do not discern the process.  As they progress through the system, they declare, “That won’t happen to me!” But, of course, it can. Albert Einstein defined "insanity" as “doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” Something has to change.  

Medical training is evolving. Work rules are in place and curricula are under constant evaluation. Our school’s Medical Humanities program brings interested students into contact with the works of poets, artists, healers, philosophers, theologians, and writers, attempting to spark new insights and to nurture coping skills. Will we create Empathy in those who possess none? Of course not. But, will we nurture Empathy in those students with the gift and the desire? Since this new cohort of physicians will be the ones caring for my generation as we approach the end of our lives, I, for one, am pinning my hopes on it.    

___
Ref: Newton BW, Barber L, Clardy J, Cleveland E, O’Sullivan P, Is There Hardening of the Heart During Medical School? Academic Medicine (March) 2008; 83:244-249.
Posted 9:15 AM
Feedback - Permalink
PROFILE
Dr. Bruce Campbell
Bruce Campbell, MD
Medical College of Wisconsin Otolaryngologist
View full profile
RECENT POSTS

Beneath the Surface

Recurrence

Signs of Obsolescence

A Positive Attitude and Cancer Survival

Out-of-Pocket

ARCHIVES
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
OTHER BLOGS

AggravatedDocSurg

Bioethics Discussion

The Blog that Ate Manhattan

Bongi

Buckeye Surgeon

db's medical rants

Dr. David's Blog

Dr. Edwin Leap

Dr. Wes

Everything Health

GruntDoc

Kevin, MD

MedGadget

MedPage Today blogs

Musings of a Distractable Mind - Dr. Rob

Notes of an Anesthesioboist

NYU Literature, Art, & Medicine

Pallimed

Respectful Insolence

Not Running a Hospital

Scan Man

Suture for a Living

Tara Parker-Pope - NYT Well blog

Tim's El Salvador blog

Dr. Val

RSS  More Info
Printer Icon
Printer Friendly
Envelope Icon
Send to a Friend
© 2013 Froedtert & The Medical College of Wisconsin
9200 W. Wisconsin Ave.
Milwaukee, WI 53226
Privacy | Security | Editorial Policy | Terms and Conditions | Accessibility | Site Index