Compassion in health professionals: Development and validation of the Capacity for Compassion Scale
Loading...
Publication date
Advisors
Department
Research group
Center
Related publication
Abstract
Background: Health professionals witness pain and suffering when they care for sick
people and their families. Compassion is a necessary quality in their work as it combines
the will to help, alleviate suffering and promote the well-being of both the people
they are attending and the professionals themselves. The aim of the study was
to design and evaluate the psychometric properties of the Capacity for Compassion
Scale (CCS).
Design: A quantitative, descriptive and cross-sectional study was carried out to evaluate
the psychometric properties of the scale (reliability, temporal stability, content
validity, criterion validity and construct validity).
Methods: The study was carried out in two phases: pilot study and final validation.
The data were collected between April and May 2022. The sample was selected by
convenience sampling and was made up of a total of 264 participants, 59 in the pilot
phase and 205 in the final validation.
Results: The Capacity for Compassion Scale has been shown to have good psychometric
properties in relation to reliability, temporal stability, and content, criterion,
and construct validity. Factor analysis showed that there were four subdimensions of
the scale: motivation/commitment, presence, shared humanity and self-compassion.
The results also indicate that compassionate ability is significantly correlated with age
and work experience.
Conclusions: The Capacity for Compassion Scale shows adequate psychometric properties.
This instrument measures the compassion capacity of health professionals,
which is a valuable discovery for new lines of research in this field.
Impact: Through this scale, low levels of capacity for compassion can be detected
that negatively influence the quality of care provided by health professionals. The
Capacity for Compassion Scale can therefore contribute to the identification of needs
and promote training around compassion for health professionals.
Patient or Public Contribution: No patient or public contribution.
Unesco Subjects
Bibliographic citation
Ruiz‐Fernández, M. D., Alcaraz‐Córdoba, A., Hernández‐Padilla, J. M., Ibáñez‐Masero, O., García‐Navarro, E. B., & Ortega‐Galán, Á. M. (2023). Compassion in health professionals: Development and validation of the Capacity for Compassion Scale. In Journal of Advanced Nursing. Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1111/jan.15987














