The Greek Jefferson Scale of Empathy—Medical Student Version (JSE-S): Psychometric Properties and Its Associated Factors

Author:

Voultsos Polychronis1ORCID,Galanis Petros2ORCID,Dafni Marianna-Foteini A.3ORCID,Velonaki Venetia-Sofia2ORCID,Andreou Georgia-Neta4,Kovatsi Leda1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forensic and Toxicology, Division: Medical Law and Ethics, School of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 54 124 Thessaloniki, Greece

2. School of Nursing, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Goudi, 11 517 Athens, Greece

3. Postgraduate Program in Bioethics, School of Medicine, Democritus University of Thrace, 68 100 Alexandroupolis, Greece

4. Michael Cacoyannis Foundation, Cultural Center, 206 Peraeus Str., Tavros, 17 778 Athens, Greece

Abstract

The present study aimed to evaluate the psychometric properties of the Greek version of the Jefferson Scale of Empathy—Student version (JSE-S) and its association with potential predictors among Greek-speaking undergraduate medical students. This study adopted a cross-sectional, comparative–descriptive research design. The study was conducted during October and November 2023. Cronbach’s α values for the JSE-S and the factors “perspective taking”, “compassionate care”, and “standing in the patient’s shoes” showed internal consistency. The intraclass correlation coefficient for the JSE-S score in the test–retest study indicated a high level of reliability. The participants showed moderate empathy levels. Females scored higher than males in the Greek version of the JSE-S. Moreover, students enrolled in the fourth academic year showed higher empathy mean scores than those enrolled in the first year. Statistically significant empathy differences by specialty preferences or faith in God/supreme power were not found. The present study provided satisfactory evidence that the Greek JSE-S is a psychometrically sound measurement instrument. Empathy differences by gender were found in line with prior literature.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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