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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07528521

Effect of a Community Service-Learning Intervention on Medical Empathy and Clinical Self-Efficacy in Medical Students

Effect of a Community Service-Learning Intervention on Medical Empathy and Perceived Clinical Self-Efficacy in Fourth-Semester Medical Students at FES Iztacala, UNAM: A Quasi-Experimental Pre-Post Study

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
35 (estimated)
Sponsor
Luis Angel Flores Sagrero · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Medical empathy and clinical self-efficacy are key professional competencies that are difficult to develop through traditional classroom-based training alone. At the Faculty of Medicine of FES Iztacala (UNAM), the curriculum includes a community practice component in the Practica Clinica I module that is rarely implemented in practice, creating a gap between the formal and real curriculum. This quasi-experimental pre-post study evaluates the effect of a structured Service-Learning (SL) intervention - a community anthropometry and somatometry assessment session conducted at a primary school - on medical empathy, perceived clinical self-efficacy, and clinical report performance in 35 fourth-semester medical students. Medical empathy will be measured using the Jefferson Scale of Empathy, Student version (JSE-S), validated in Spanish for Latin American populations. Clinical self-efficacy will be measured using the Medical Self-Efficacy Scale (EAM), a 5-item Likert instrument developed by the principal investigator (Cronbach's alpha=0.818, McDonald's omega=0.862). Clinical performance will be assessed using a standardized 33-point rubric evaluated blindly by two independent faculty members, with inter-rater reliability calculated using the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC). Children participating in the community session will receive a personalized health report with their anthropometric results and, if clinically relevant findings are detected, will be referred to the University Health Clinic (CUSI) at FES Iztacala at no cost.

Detailed description

BACKGROUND: The Practica Clinica I module at FES Iztacala, UNAM, formally establishes three learning spaces: classroom, clinical, and community. However, systematic observation during the principal investigator's medical internship revealed that the community space is rarely operationalized, resulting in a significant gap between the formal and real curriculum. Students complete the module without real clinical contact with external patients, which limits the development of empathy and clinical self-efficacy. THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK: The intervention is grounded in Service-Learning pedagogy, Kolb's experiential learning cycle, Bandura's self-efficacy theory, and the medical empathy model by Hojat. The community activity at a primary school fulfills all constitutive elements of SL: a real community need (nutritional screening), structured learning objectives aligned with the curriculum, and mutual benefit for both students and the community. INTERVENTION: Participating medical students will conduct a full anthropometric and somatometric assessment of school-age children, including: weight, height, BMI calculation and interpretation using WHO/CDC reference tables, body circumferences (waist, hip, arm), body segments (armspan and others), and waist-hip ratio. Students will complete a simplified clinical history form and produce a written clinical report including findings interpretation and health recommendations. Each child's family will receive a sealed envelope with their personalized results. Children with clinically significant findings will be referred to CUSI (FES Iztacala). MEASUREMENTS: * Medical empathy: JSE-S (20 items, 7-point Likert, range 20-140), applied pre and post intervention. Used with permission from Thomas Jefferson University. * Clinical self-efficacy: EAM (5 items, 5-point Likert, range 5-25), applied pre and post intervention. * Clinical report performance: standardized rubric (7 dimensions, 33 points), applied blindly by two independent faculty members to both the pre-intervention report (classroom peer practice) and post-intervention report (community real patient). ICC will be calculated before proceeding with comparisons. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Shapiro-Wilk normality test on pre-post differences. Paired t-test or Wilcoxon signed-rank test depending on normality. Cohen's d for effect size. Bonferroni correction for three simultaneous primary hypotheses (adjusted alpha=0.017). Pearson or Spearman correlation for the secondary hypothesis. Software: JASP and G\*Power. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS: The study poses minimal risk. Informed consent will be obtained from all medical students. Parental informed consent and children's assent will be obtained for all school-age participants. The study will be submitted for ethical review to the Ethics Committee of FES Iztacala (CEI-FES Iztacala) prior to data collection. The JSE-S is used with written permission from Thomas Jefferson University (April 2025).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCommunity Service-Learning Anthropometric AssessmentA single-session community Service-Learning activity conducted at Escuela Primaria Jesus Garcia (C.T. 15DPR1779L). Medical students perform weight, height, BMI, body circumferences (waist, hip, arm), body segments, and waist-hip ratio measurements on consenting school children. Students complete a simplified clinical history form and produce a written clinical report including anthropometric data, interpretation using WHO/CDC reference tables, relevant findings, and health recommendations. Each participating child's family receives a sealed personalized results envelope. Students with clinically significant findings are referred to CUSI (FES Iztacala). Duration: one full day. Supervised by faculty members from FES Iztacala.

Timeline

Start date
2026-04-08
Primary completion
2026-05-13
Completion
2026-05-27
First posted
2026-04-14
Last updated
2026-04-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Mexico

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07528521. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.