University of Wisconsin–Madison Medical College of Wisconsin

The Role of Clinical Empathy as Perceived by Medical Students

Niki Viradia, MS; Jesica Miroslava Godinez Paredes, MS; Grace Tews, BA; Riley M. McCarty, BS; Katherine Loper, BS; Sanjay Bhandari, MD; Pinky Jha, MD, MPH

WMJ. 2026;125(1):134-137.

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ABSTRACT

Background: Clinical empathy is a pillar of medical practice, with evidence demonstrating improved clinical outcomes and patient resilience when physician empathy is employed effectively. Despite its well-established value, studies indicate that empathy declines significantly during the third year of medical school.

Objective: To examine how medical students perceive the importance of empathy in patient care and to identify preferred methods for teaching empathy within the medical curriculum.

Methods: A survey was distributed to 456 third- and fourth-year medical students at the Medical College of Wisconsin during August and September 2018. The response rate was 39%. Chi-square analyses compared perceptions between genders and between year groups. Students who declined to identify gender were excluded from gender-based analyses.

Results: Fourth-year students were significantly more likely than third-year students to report that working with attending physicians increased their empathy (50% vs. 34.3%, P  = .034). Female students were more likely than male students to believe that empathy improved patient outcomes (100% vs 89.2%, P  = .003). Educational preferences also differed by gender.

Conclusions: Medical students recognize empathy as an essential aspect of clinical care. Clinical experiences, particularly interactions with attending physicians, may enhance empathy training, and gender-based differences in educational preferences highlight the need for diversified, learner-responsive instructional methods.


Author affiliations: Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Viradia, Tews, McCarty, Loper, Bhandari, Jha); Reno School of Medicine, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada (Paredes).
Corresponding author:
Niki Viradia, MS, Medical College of Wisconsin, 8701 W Watertown Plank Rd, Milwaukee, WI 53226; email nviradia@mcw.edu; ORCID ID 0000-0003-1956-6699
Financial disclosures: None declared.
Funding/support: None declared.
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