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Professional carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual disabilities 1 Dr Kirsten Collins Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust [email protected] Dr Caroline Gratton Ms Celia Heneage Professor Dave Dagnan
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Professional carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual disabilities

Feb 23, 2016

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Professional carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual disabilities. Dr Kirsten Collins Oxleas NHS Foundation Trust [email protected] Dr Caroline Gratton Ms Celia Heneage Professor Dave Dagnan. A quick guide to empathy. Cognitive vs. affective empathy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

Professional carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual

disabilities

1

Dr Kirsten CollinsOxleas NHS Foundation [email protected]

Dr Caroline Gratton Ms Celia HeneageProfessor Dave Dagnan

Page 2: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

A quick guide to empathy• Cognitive vs. affective empathy

• Strong evidence that empathy…

a) influences caregiving/helping- Batson’s empathy-altruism hypothesis.

b) is associated with improved health & social care outcomes.

Page 3: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

Carer empathy is important• People with intellectual disabilities (‘service users’) value

empathy (Clarkson et al. 2009; Dinsmore & Higgins, 2011; Roeden et al. 2011)

• Staff offer key emotional support (Forrester-Jones et al. 2006) given small relationship networks. Relationships with staff become important (McVilly et al. 2006).

•Winterbourne: carer values in preventing abuse • Difficulty communicating internal world = reliance on carers

using empathy to interpret needs & feelings.

Page 4: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

Could empathy link situational and

dispositional models of caregiving behaviour?

Empathy associated with attachment security (Mikulincer & Shaver, 2007) & Bowlby’s (1982) mental representations of caregiving (Reizer & Mikulincer, 2007).

Attachment style influences caring interactions with service users (Schuengel et al. 2012). Attribution theory (Weiner, 1980) applied to

challenging behaviour: mixed evidence. Strongest correlation between sympathy & helping (e.g. Dagnan & Cairns, 2005).

Could empathic stance increase model’s predictive power (based on Betancourt, 1990)?

Page 5: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

A new empathy measureAims• Develop a new measure of carers’ empathy towards people with

intellectual disabilities.• What does this say about the nature of empathy towards service users?

Measure development• “What comes to mind when you think of professional carers’ empathy

towards people with an intellectual disability?”• 31 responses → Thematic analysis → 12 themes → 60 items• Experts rated items → 28 item draft questionnaire• Pilot study → minor language adjustments• 5 questionnaires to 800 staff (194 returned, 13 employers, 74% female)

Page 6: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

Quantitative study1. EMP-ID (the new measure)

2. Demographics and nature of work

3. Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI): dispositional empathy measure-contains cognitive and affective subscales

4. Mental Representations of Caregiving Scale (MRC)-perceived ability to recognise others’ needs-appraisal of others as worthy of help-perceived ability to provide effective help-altruistic and egoistic motivations for helping

5. Marlowe-Crown Social Desirability Scale (SDS)

Page 7: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

Exploratory factor analysis• Two stage factor analysis → 21 item scale with a 3-factor structure

• Proximity: sense of psychological closeness and of having shared/common psychological experiences to people with intellectual disabilities.

• Active attunement: deliberate effort to tune in to service users’ internal worlds

• Challenge: whether it feels difficult to empathise with service users.

• All loadings > 0.32 (minimum to claim loading)• Majority of loadings > 0.45 = ‘fair’

Page 8: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

PsychometricsSupport for construct validity1. Highly significant correlations (i.e. many at 0.001 sig. level) with

MRC subscales. Pattern of correlations supports our interpretation of factors.

2. Significant correlations (mainly at 0.01 sig. level) with IRI subscales.

3. Some factors relate to gender and whether pps know a person with an intellectual disability outside work.

Subscales have acceptable internal (0.73≤ α ≥0.76) and test-retest (0.56≤ r ≥0.86) reliability.

Page 9: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

What does this mean? • Factors do not map to the cognitive/affective structure.

• Factors fit with other empathy research1. Proximity/ imagine self/ similarity cluster2. Active attunement/ imagine other/ nurturance cluster

• Logical that similarity and nurturance become salient when the ‘subject’ of empathy has an intellectual disability

• Challenge: how easy it is to actively attune

Page 10: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

ConclusionsCognitive and affective processes are not the most salient feature Instead…Empathising with people with intellectual disabilities exacerbates particular processes used in empathising more generally: a) carers’ sense of themselves as psychologically similar, and

willingness to be psychologically close, to people with an intellectual disability (proximity).

b) carers’ active efforts to tune in to people with intellectual disabilities’ internal worlds (active attunement).

Study gives evidence that carers’ mental representations of caregiving relate to their empathy towards service users.

Page 11: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

Some limitations• A self-report measure

• Accounts for 34% variance i.e. other unmeasured influences on empathy.

• Challenge items all negatively worded: did they cluster because of wording?

• Correlations are highly significant but weak i.e. small effects.

• Variance in Active Attunement scores could result from individual differences in tendency to respond in a socially desirable manner.

• 25% response rate i.e. do findings generalise if very empathic carers participated?

Page 12: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

Future research• How does self-reported empathy relate to actual feelings/demonstrations of

empathy ?

• Clarification of the nature & determinants of the empathy clusters.

• How do attachment styles influence carers’ empathy & caregiving behaviour?

• Does an empathic stance influence attributions, emotions and helping behaviour towards PWID?

• How can organisations can help carers maintain empathy?

Page 13: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

ImplicationsCare providers•Consider job applicants’ empathy

•Organisational ethos: attuning is valuable

•Attachment representations are likely to influence empathy and caregiving for service users. Enhance ‘felt’ security e.g. regular, reflective supervision with a consistent supervisor & work in one location.

Psychologists•Exercises/therapy/reflective practice to increase use of empathy skill clusters

•Explore impact of beliefs that empathising with service users is challenging

•Recognised empathy interventions e.g. internalised-other, mentalization.

•Help providers to enhance ‘felt’ security via consultancy on how providers enhance security or training/supervision to managers within care organisations

Page 14: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

A (partial) recipe for empathy?

… a secure base hierarchy… empathising-understoodreciprocal roles?

Person with

an intellectual disabilit

y

‘Felt secure’ staff team, being

empathic to a…

‘Felt secure’ LDT & psychologists, being empathic to a…

Politically stable NHS Trust, supporting and being mindful of a…

Page 15: Professional  carers’ empathy towards people with intellectual  disabilities

Questions, comments, reflections…