The friendly relationship between therapeutic empathy and person-centred care
The friendly relationship between therapeutic empathy and person-centred care
‘Person-centred care’ and ‘empathy’ are receiving an increasing amount of attention in the healthcare literature. These two concepts are related; however, their relationship has hitherto not been rigorously explored. In this paper we review the differences and commonalities between common definitions of the two concepts. We found that therapeutic empathy requires both interpersonal understanding (achieved via one of several potential means) as well as caring action. We also found that person-centred care could be defined as follows:
Person-centred care is therapeutic empathy (interpersonal understanding and caring action) together with continuity, coordination, teamwork, access and empowerment.
Conceived this way, therapeutic empathy is included within person-centred care, but not vice-versa. There are three important consequences of our analysis. First, empathy training can provide one of the means by which (part of) person-centred care can be achieved. Second, researchers and practitioners can use our analysis of empathy and person-centred care to collaborate in approaches to both research and training. Third, philosophers, who sometimes take empathy to be a foundational concept in interpersonal understanding, can use our findings to inform their work. Finally, we hope to have provided more clarity not just on the relationship between empathy and person-centred care, but also on the nature of those two individual concepts.
351-357
Hardman, Doug
bf7ba905-0d04-4d1f-9686-f9a3a3d642db
Howick, Jeremy
c6a90b32-af65-42b4-a004-714c96bfb615
August 2019
Hardman, Doug
bf7ba905-0d04-4d1f-9686-f9a3a3d642db
Howick, Jeremy
c6a90b32-af65-42b4-a004-714c96bfb615
Hardman, Doug and Howick, Jeremy
(2019)
The friendly relationship between therapeutic empathy and person-centred care.
European Journal for Person Centered Healthcare, 7 (2), .
(doi:10.5750/ejpch.v7i2.1689).
Abstract
‘Person-centred care’ and ‘empathy’ are receiving an increasing amount of attention in the healthcare literature. These two concepts are related; however, their relationship has hitherto not been rigorously explored. In this paper we review the differences and commonalities between common definitions of the two concepts. We found that therapeutic empathy requires both interpersonal understanding (achieved via one of several potential means) as well as caring action. We also found that person-centred care could be defined as follows:
Person-centred care is therapeutic empathy (interpersonal understanding and caring action) together with continuity, coordination, teamwork, access and empowerment.
Conceived this way, therapeutic empathy is included within person-centred care, but not vice-versa. There are three important consequences of our analysis. First, empathy training can provide one of the means by which (part of) person-centred care can be achieved. Second, researchers and practitioners can use our analysis of empathy and person-centred care to collaborate in approaches to both research and training. Third, philosophers, who sometimes take empathy to be a foundational concept in interpersonal understanding, can use our findings to inform their work. Finally, we hope to have provided more clarity not just on the relationship between empathy and person-centred care, but also on the nature of those two individual concepts.
Text
Therapeutic empathy and person-centred care_Accepted Manuscript
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 1 February 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 August 2019
Published date: August 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 433982
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/433982
ISSN: 2052-5648
PURE UUID: 9b9a157d-b23e-44ee-918c-9ce13d71be56
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 09 Sep 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:54
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Doug Hardman
Author:
Jeremy Howick
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics