Measuring compassion in healthcare: a comprehensive and critical review

Abstract
Background: There is international concern about the lack of compassion in healthcare systems. A valid and reliable tool for measuring compassion in healthcare systems and educational institutions is required. This comprehensive and critical narrative synthesis identified and compared existing measures of compassionate care in clinical settings. Methods: PubMed, Medline, CINAHL and PsycINFO databases and grey literature were searched to identify studies that report information on instruments that measure compassion or compassionate care in clinicians, nurses, healthcare students and patients. Textual qualitative descriptions of included studies were prepared. Instruments were evaluated using the Evaluating Measures of Patient-Reported Outcomes (EMPRO) tool. Results: Nine studies containing information on the Compassion Competence Scale, a self-report instrument that measures compassion competence among Korean nurses; the Compassion scale, the Compassionate Care Assessment Tool©, and The Schwartz Center Compassionate Care ScaleTM, patient-report instruments that measure the importance of healthcare provider compassion; the Compassion Practices Scale, an instrument that measures organizational support for compassionate care; and instruments that measure compassion in educational institutions (instructional quality and a geriatric attitudes scale), were included. Each instrument is associated with significant limitations. Most only measure certain aspects of compassion and lack evidence of adaptability to diverse practice settings.The EMPRO of self-report instruments revealed a lack of psychometric information on measurement reliability, validity, responsiveness, and interpretability; respondent, administrative and scoring burden; and use in subpopulations.
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Citation
Sinclair, Shane, et al. (2016). Measuring compassion in healthcare: a comprehensive and critical review