Do nurses and other professional helpers normally display much empathy?
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Advanced Nursing
- Vol. 31 (1) , 226-234
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2648.2000.01242.x
Abstract
Do nurses and other professional helpers normally display much empathy?Empathy, the ability to perceive and reason, as well as the ability to communicate understanding of the other person’s feelings and their attached meanings, is held to be a core characteristic of a helping relationship. This paper examines some of the observations that motivated the authors’ interest in how registered nurses learn how to offer empathy to clients. First, while empathy is crucial to all helping relationships, professional helpers do not normally offer much empathy. Second, while nurses are meant to provide helping relationships, they do not tend to show much empathy to clients. The relevance of empathy to clinical nursing and the potential consequences of low‐empathy nursing for clients is considered. It will be shown that, in the past, a low level of empathy has been reported among the helping professions, including nursing, indicating that many professional helpers are not as helpful as they ought to be. While most studies of empathy in professional relationships are more than a decade old, more recent studies report similar results.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- The organizational influence on counselling relationships in a general hospital settingJournal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 1995
- The influence of clients' perceptions of the helping relationship in the development of an empathy scaleJournal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 1994
- Hypertension, perceived clinician empathy, and patient self-disclosureResearch in Nursing & Health, 1985
- Psychological aspects of breast cancer; Workshop reportEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1983
- Patient centred teaching: a future role for the psychiatric nurse teacher?Journal of Advanced Nursing, 1982
- Social support, accommodation to stress and adjustment to breast cancerSocial Science & Medicine, 1982
- The use of modeling to teach empathy to nursing studentsResearch in Nursing & Health, 1979
- Empothic communication and its effect on client outcomeIssues in Mental Health Nursing, 1979
- Empathy Training as the Major Thrust of a Staff Development ProgramNursing Research, 1976
- The necessary and sufficient conditions of therapeutic personality change.Journal of Consulting Psychology, 1957