Litcius/Paper detail

Use and effectiveness of the arts for enhancing healthcare students' empathy skills: A mixed methods systematic review

Tracy Levett‐Jones, Elizabeth Brogan, Deborah Debono, Mark Goodhew, Natalie Govind, Jacqueline Pich, Jo River, Judith Baigis Smith, Suzanne Sheppard‐Law, Robyn Cant

2024Nurse Education Today27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify, critically appraise and synthesise evidence of the use and effectiveness of the arts for enhancing pre-registration/prelicensure healthcare students' empathy skills. DESIGN: A systematic review of mixed methods literature. DATA SOURCES: A search of six electronic databases was conducted. REVIEW METHODS: Articles describing English language, peer-reviewed, primary research studies reporting empathy as an outcome of an arts-based intervention with pre-registration/prelicensure healthcare students (years 1-7) and published between 2000 and 2024 were eligible for inclusion. The JBI Manual for Evidence Synthesis guided the review and a convergent segregated methodology was used to synthesise the results. Methodological rigour of included studies was examined using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool. RESULTS: Twenty studies from 12 countries described the use of the arts to develop empathy, with visual arts being the most common approach (n = 8). Other modalities included film, drama, digital stories, literature, creative writing, music, poetry, photography and dance. Studies included nursing, medicine and dental, pharmacy and/or health sciences students. Ten studies used quantitative methods, three qualitative, and seven used mixed methods designs. Of the studies that presented pre-post outcome measures, nine reported significant gains in empathy scores at post-test and two reported non-significant gains in empathy. In eight studies, empathy scores demonstrated a significant intervention effect with effect sizes ranging from moderate (d = 0.52) to large (d = 1.19). Findings from qualitative studies revealed that arts pedagogies support students to better understand the perspectives of people with a lived experience of suffering but that these approaches are sometimes perceived negatively by students. CONCLUSIONS: Arts interventions generally have a positive effect on healthcare students' empathy levels and enable a nuanced conceptual understanding of empathy. Arts modalities used as a stimulus for active learning and supported with facilitated group-based discussion and/or reflection, tend to be most effective.

Topics & Concepts

EmpathyPsychologyHealth careMedical educationCritical appraisalDanceThe artsNursingApplied psychologyMedicineSocial psychologyAlternative medicineVisual artsArtEconomicsEconomic growthPathologyEmpathy and Medical EducationInnovations in Medical EducationCultural Competency in Health Care