移情
精神病理学
社会心理的
心理学
情感(语言学)
心理健康
人口
临床心理学
感知
认知
精神科
心理治疗师
医学
神经科学
环境卫生
沟通
作者
Matthew S. Lebowitz,Woo‐kyoung Ahn
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1414058111
摘要
Significance Mental disorders are increasingly understood biologically. We tested the effects of biological explanations among mental health clinicians, specifically examining their empathy toward patients. Conventional wisdom suggests that biological explanations reduce perceived blameworthiness against those with mental disorders, which could increase empathy. Yet, conceptualizing mental disorders biologically can cast patients as physiologically different from “normal” people and as governed by genetic or neurochemical abnormalities instead of their own human agency, which can engender negative social attitudes and dehumanization. This suggests that biological explanations might actually decrease empathy. Indeed, we find that biological explanations significantly reduce clinicians’ empathy. This is alarming because clinicians’ empathy is important for the therapeutic alliance between mental health providers and patients and significantly predicts positive clinical outcomes.
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