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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FROM: Nancy
Gardner (206) 543-2580
nancylou@u.washington.edu
DATE:
March 1, 2005
Business scholars for more than 20 years have explored the
concept of 'emotional labor,' or the management of emotions
to present a certain image in service workers. Now, researchers
from the University of Washington Business School and Group
Health Cooperative have teamed up to explore how the concept
can be applied to the medical profession.
"We propose that the emotional labor of physicians
is characterized by the display of empathy," said Dr.
Eric B. Larson, director of Group Health's Center for
Health Studies and co- author of a commentary in the March
2 issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association.
"Empathy is essential to healing relationships, so
it's
something all health professionals should be expected to
show – even when it's hard to do so."
Drawing from previous research that equates service workers' labor
to the work of stage actors, Larson and co-author Xin Yao,
a doctoral student in the UW Business School, describe a
model for applying acting techniques to the delivery of empathy
in doctor-patient interactions. They suggest that doctors
use two techniques separately or in combination – 'deep
acting,' which uses imagination and emotional memories to
generate genuine feelings of empathy for the patient, and
'surface acting,' in which the doctor forges emotional expressions
inconsistent with internal feelings. This would allow the
doctor to display behaviors the patient can interpret as
empathic.
The authors contend that deep acting is preferred because
it makes doctors more effective healers. They also believe
doctors have greater professional satisfaction and less professional
burnout when they practice deep acting, but may have to rely
on surface acting when genuine empathy seems impossible.
Surface acting may be needed, for example, in situations
in which the doctor's values or beliefs are entirely
different from the patient's.
"We suggested viewing physician empathy as emotional
labor and how doctors can achieve empathy through acting," said
Yao, who did the work for her doctoral dissertation. "Thus,
by learning about and consciously engaging oneself in deep
acting and surface acting, physicians can be more prepared
to meet patients' needs."
The authors say doctors need to recognize that their work
has an element of emotional labor and to consciously practice
deep and surface acting to empathize with their patients.
They also recommend long-term, regular training to help doctors
develop empathy.
"This will be valuable for both physicians and patients
facing the increasingly fragmented and technological world
of modern
medicine," they write.
"
For patients, our message is that it's reasonable to
expect physicians to show empathy," said Larson. "It's
part of the physician's job."
Larson also urged healthcare consumers to seek long-term,
continuous relationships with physicians they like.
"The better the physician knows you, the easier it
is to develop an empathic, healing relationship."
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