Resilience and Empathy in Dental Students: A Comparative Cross‐Sectional Study in Two Latin American Universities
María Jorgelina Ulloque, Laura Sánchez Jiménez, Sara Huerta‐González, Rubén Eduardo Vázquez‐García, Lindsey W. Vilca, Silvina Villalba, José Gamarra‐Moncayo, Yolanda Dávila‐Pontón, Iván Eduardo Insignares‐Arango, Alma Rosa Quiroz Guerra, Víctor P. Díaz‐NarváezABSTRACT
Objective
To examine the association between resilience and empathy in dental students and to explore how specific resilience dimensions relate to different components of empathy in two Latin American universities.
Methods
This cross‐sectional study included students from two countries: Argentina ( n = 200) and Costa Rica ( n = 222). The Jefferson Scale of Empathy for Health Professions Students and the Trait Resilience Scale were administered. Confirmatory factor analyses and structural equation modeling were conducted to examine the associations between resilience and empathy.
Results
Resilience dimensions showed context‐dependent associations with specific empathy dimensions, although not all relationships reached statistical significance. In Costa Rica, engineering resilience showed statistically significant associations with perspective‐taking ( β = –0.23, p < 0.05) and walking in the patient's shoes ( β = 0.19, p < 0.05), while ecological resilience was significantly associated with perspective‐taking ( β = 0.26, p < 0.01).
Conclusions
Resilience showed context‐dependent associations with empathy dimensions. These findings underscore the relevance of resilience and empathy as socio‐emotional constructs within dental education.