Fear and Empathy with COVID-19 Patients Among Medical Students

Q3 Medicine Shiraz E Medical Journal Pub Date : 2023-01-31 DOI:10.5812/semj-130631
Fatemeh Vara, M. Amini, M. Moosavi, Amir Askarinejad, Sarvin Sasannia, Parinaz Tabari, M. Sagheb, Amirarsalan Bahrani Kazeronian
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Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has induced fear and mental health problems in the community and among healthcare workers. Empathy with patients may be difficult in such situations due to urgent conditions. Objectives: We aimed to evaluate medical students’ empathy and fear toward COVID-19 patients during the pandemic. Methods: This cross-sectional study recruited 107 medical students from Shiraz Medical School in 2021. A Persian version of the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy (JSPE) was used to assess the participants’ empathy toward COVID-19 patients. The internal validity of the Persian version of JSPE was 0.78, and its test-retest reliability after 14 days was 0.92 in a previous study. The participants were requested to fill out a fear of COVID-19 scale (FCV-19S) previously developed to assess their fear of affliction with COVID-19. Since the normality of data distribution was not approved, we used nonparametric tests, namely, the Mann-Whitney U test and the Spearman correlation coefficient. Results: The mean empathy score based on the Persian version JSPE was 71.94 ± 12.83 out of 140, which was higher in male students and those who resided in dormitories. The mean fear score was 24.93 ± 6.16 out of 35. Participants living out of dormitories feared COVID-19 to a greater extent. No statistically significant association was found between the age of the participants and these two parameters. The Spearman correlation coefficient test showed that students with a history of COVID-19 had less fear and more empathy because of their experience with COVID-19 (r = -0.249, P-value = 0.02). Conclusions: This study highlights the impact of the pandemic on the interaction between medical students as healthcare professionals and patients by affecting medical students’ fear and empathy. The study indicates ways to improve readiness for future pandemics. Our study showed that living far away from families in dormitories may influence students’ fear and empathy. Moreover, empathy, unlike fear, was affected by gender. A reverse correlation existed between fear and empathy in students with a history of COVID-19, indicating that the more they had empathy, the less they experienced fear.
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医学生对COVID-19患者的恐惧和同情
背景:2019冠状病毒病大流行在社区和医护人员中引发了恐惧和心理健康问题。在这种情况下,由于情况紧急,可能很难与患者产生共鸣。目的:评估大流行期间医学生对COVID-19患者的同理心和恐惧。方法:本横断面研究于2021年从设拉子医学院招募107名医学生。使用波斯语版杰弗逊医生共情量表(JSPE)来评估参与者对COVID-19患者的共情。文献中波斯语版JSPE的内部效度为0.78,14天后重测信度为0.92。参与者被要求填写之前开发的COVID-19恐惧量表(FCV-19S),以评估他们对COVID-19痛苦的恐惧。由于数据分布的正态性不被认可,我们使用了非参数检验,即Mann-Whitney U检验和Spearman相关系数。结果:波斯语版JSPE共情评分平均为71.94±12.83分(总分140分),其中男生和宿舍学生得分较高。平均恐惧得分为24.93±6.16分(满分35分)。住在宿舍外的参与者对新冠肺炎的恐惧程度更高。在参与者的年龄和这两个参数之间没有发现统计学上显著的关联。Spearman相关系数检验显示,有新冠肺炎病史的学生因经历过新冠肺炎,其恐惧程度较低,共情程度较高(r = -0.249, p值= 0.02)。结论:本研究通过影响医学生的恐惧和同理心,突出了疫情对医学生作为医护专业人员与患者互动的影响。这项研究指出了提高对未来流行病准备程度的方法。我们的研究表明,远离家庭的宿舍可能会影响学生的恐惧和同理心。此外,同理心与恐惧不同,会受到性别的影响。有COVID-19病史的学生的恐惧和同理心之间存在负相关,表明他们的同理心越多,他们的恐惧就越少。
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来源期刊
Shiraz E Medical Journal
Shiraz E Medical Journal Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.00
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0.00%
发文量
63
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