RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Physician empathy is associated with improved patient outcomes. No studies have examined the outcomes of medical improvisational (improv) training on empathy. OBJECTIVE: Our aims were to determine whether an improv workshop is an effective tool to deliver empathy training for obstetrics and gynecology (OB-GYN) residents, and whether that effect is sustained over time. METHODS: We conducted a prospective cohort study of OB-GYN residents undergoing empathy training through 4 improv games in a 1-hour session. Empathy surveys (score range 20-140) with validity evidence were administered 2 weeks prior to empathy training, immediately after, and 1, 3, and 6 months later. Fisher's exact test, Student's t test, and Wilcoxon rank sum test were used to compare statistical differences at each post-intervention assessment. RESULTS: All 22 invited residents participated in empathy training. Empathy scores improved immediately after (120.0 ± 9.8 versus 113.1 ± 10.6, P = .026), though they regressed toward baseline through 6 months (116.3 ± 11.0 versus 113.1 ± 10.6, P = .43). When asked on a scale of 1-5 how much the workshop would impact their work, there was an increase in scores both immediately after (mean 3.5 versus 4.6, P < .001) and 1 month later (mean 3.5 versus 4.1, P = .039), but this difference disappeared at 6 months. CONCLUSIONS: Using improv comedy to deliver empathy training is associated with a minor improvement in empathy scores in OB-GYN residents, which decreased at 6 months. Residents found the activity to be acceptable and reported the training would impact their clinical practice.