Empathic communication between clinicians, patients, and care partners in palliative care encounters Journal Article


Authors: Mroz, E. L.; McDarby, M.; Kutner, J. S.; Arnold, R. M.; Bylund, C. L.; Pollak, K. I.
Article Title: Empathic communication between clinicians, patients, and care partners in palliative care encounters
Abstract: Objective: Palliative care encounters often involve empathic opportunities conveyed by patients and their care partners. In this secondary analysis, we examined empathic opportunities and clinician responses with attention to how presence of multiple care partners and clinicians shapes empathic communication. Methods: We used the Empathic Communication Coding System (ECCS) to characterize emotion-focused, challenge-focused, and progress-focused empathic opportunities and responses in 71 audio-recorded palliative care encounters in the US. Results: Patients expressed more emotion-focused empathic opportunities than did care partners; care partners expressed more challenge-focused empathic opportunities than did patients. Care partners initiated empathic opportunities more frequently when more care partners were present, though they expressed fewer as the number of clinicians increased. When more care partners and more clinicians were present, clinicians had fewer low-empathy responses. Conclusion: The number of care partners and clinicians present affect empathic communication. Clinicians should be prepared for empathic communication focal points to shift depending on the number of care partners and clinicians present. Practice implications: Findings can guide development of resources to prepare clinicians to meet emotional needs in palliative care discussions. Interventions can coach clinicians to respond empathically and pragmatically to patients and care partners, particularly when multiple care partners are in attendance. © 2023 Elsevier B.V.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; palliative therapy; empathy; emotion; attention; secondary analysis; caregiver support; human; article; caregiver needs; triadic communication
Journal Title: Patient Education and Counseling
Volume: 114
ISSN: 0738-3991
Publisher: Elsevier Ireland Ltd.  
Date Published: 2023-09-01
Start Page: 107811
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.pec.2023.107811
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 37244131
PMCID: PMC10526983
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PDF -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Meghan Mcdarby
    29 Mcdarby