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The Jefferson Scale of Empathy: a nationwide study of measurement properties,underlying components,latent variable structure,and national norms in medical students
Authors:Mohammadreza Hojat  Jennifer DeSantis  Stephen C. Shannon  Luke H. Mortensen  Mark R. Speicher  Lynn Bragan  Marianna LaNoue  Leonard H. Calabrese
Affiliation:1.Center for Research in Medical Education and Health Care,Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University,Philadelphia,USA;2.American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine,Bethesda,USA;3.The Cleveland Clinic,Cleveland,USA
Abstract:The Jefferson Scale of Empathy (JSE) is a broadly used instrument developed to measure empathy in the context of health professions education and patient care. Evidence in support of psychometrics of the JSE has been reported in health professions students and practitioners with the exception of osteopathic medical students. This study was designed to examine measurement properties, underlying components, and latent variable structure of the JSE in a nationwide sample of first-year matriculants at U.S. colleges of osteopathic medicine, and to develop a national norm table for the assessment of JSE scores. A web-based survey was administered at the beginning of the 2017–2018 academic year which included the JSE, a scale to detect “good impression” responses, and demographic/background information. Usable surveys were received from 6009 students enrolled in 41 college campuses (median response rate?=?92%). The JSE mean score and standard deviation for the sample were 116.54 and 10.85, respectively. Item-total score correlations were positive and statistically significant (p?
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