Compassion Changes Everything

Additional References about Compassion and Time

  • Riess, H., Kelley, J. M., Bailey, R. W., Dunn, E. J., & Phillips, M. (2012). Empathy training for resident physicians: a randomized controlled trial of a neuroscience-informed curriculum. Journal of general internal medicine27(10), 1280-1286.

  • Fogarty, L. A., Curbow, B. A., Wingard, J. R., McDonnell, K., & Somerfield, M. R. (1999). Can 40 seconds of compassion reduce patient anxiety?. Journal of Clinical Oncology17(1), 371-371.

  • Bylund, C. L., & Makoul, G. (2005). Examining empathy in medical encounters: an observational study using the empathic communication coding system. Health communication18(2), 123-140.

  • van Osch, M., Sep, M., van Vliet, L. M., van Dulmen, S., & Bensing, J. M. (2014). Reducing patients’ anxiety and uncertainty, and improving recall in bad news consultations. Health Psychology33(11), 1382.

  • Sep, M. S., Van Osch, M., Van Vliet, L. M., Smets, E. M., & Bensing, J. M. (2014). The power of clinicians’ affective communication: how reassurance about non-abandonment can reduce patients’ physiological arousal and increase information recall in bad news consultations. An experimental study using analogue patients. Patient education and counseling95(1), 45-52.

  • Fogarty, L. A., Curbow, B. A., Wingard, J. R., McDonnell, K., & Somerfield, M. R. (1999). Can 40 seconds of compassion reduce patient anxiety?. Journal of Clinical Oncology17(1), 371-371.

  • Roter, D. L., Hall, J. A., Kern, D. E., Barker, L. R., Cole, K. A., & Roca, R. P. (1995). Improving physicians' interviewing skills and reducing patients' emotional distress: a randomized clinical trial. Archives of internal medicine155(17), 1877-1884.

  • Dempsey, C. (2018). The antidote to suffering: How compassionate connected care can improve safety, quality, and experience.