Stoneygate Centre for Empathic Healthcare
Research
Our research agenda is shaped by our vision to provide evidence-based empathic training with a measurable impact on patient care, outcomes and experience. It is categorised into five core themes:
Theme A: Building the evidence base for current tools and measures assessing the impact of empathy training
We will gather evidence of the current, validated tools used in a range of healthcare student and professional populations for measuring empathy to assess the impact of training interventions.
This theme will provide essential research evidence that will be central to all other activities the Centre undertakes. Identifying, developing and using tools that can most accurately measure the impact the Centre’s empathy-focused training has on participants will allow evaluation and appropriate modification of teaching activities, as well as providing credibility for the franchise of the programme.
Theme B: Assessment of measurement strategies for assessing the impact of empathic practice on patient care and experience
Understanding how empathic care impacts on patient outcomes and experiences, and how this can most appropriately be measured, will be key to the Centre’s influence at the highest level.
The Centre will aim to build on the evidence that empathic practice improves not just patient experience and satisfaction with their care but also, for example, reduces pain (and the need for analgesic medication), reduces length of hospital stay or number of GP appointments made, and makes care more cost effective.
Theme C: Educational intervention development and evaluation
The work will be guided by a curriculum framework in clinical empathy that identifies core competencies and outcomes used to demonstrate they have been achieved. Integration of an empathy-focused curriculum will be in partnership with Leicester Medical School and will be guided by the GMC’s outcomes for graduates.
Theme C will initially focus on the development and testing of educational activities designed to nurture empathy in participants. Some aspects of this will focus on the enhancement of the original curriculum by re-purposing current teaching, whilst other aspects will focus on the implementation of newly designed lectures, small group tutorials and workshops.
Theme D: Empathy and medical student wellbeing
As the Centre moves towards developing its postgraduate training package (based on findings from research themes A-C), a clearer understanding of how empathy training can enhance practitioner wellbeing and resilience, and potentially reduce job-related stress and burnout will be key. To ensure uptake across the postgraduate and professional healthcare arena, trusts and training bodies will be looking for the ‘added extras’ empathy training could provide to a struggling workforce.
Theme E: Identifying the barriers and enablers to empathic care and building strategies to mitigate/harness these
This theme will focus on the multitude of potential barriers that exist across systems to prevent empathic practice or lessen the impact that those practicing medicine with therapeutic empathy can have on the patients they care for, their colleagues and the environments they work in. It will also explore enablers to empathic care and how these can be incorporated more effectively.
Publications
2025
2024