Emotional intelligence predicts success in medical school.

N Libbrecht, F Lievens, B Carette, S C�t��- Emotion, 2014 - psycnet.apa.org
N Libbrecht, F Lievens, B Carette, S C�t�
Emotion, 2014psycnet.apa.org
Accumulating evidence suggests that effective communication and interpersonal sensitivity
during interactions between doctors and patients impact therapeutic outcomes. There is an
important need to identify predictors of these behaviors, because traditional tests used in
medical admissions offer limited predictions of “bedside manners” in medical practice. This
study examined whether emotional intelligence would predict the performance of 367
medical students in medical school courses on communication and interpersonal sensitivity�…
Abstract
Accumulating evidence suggests that effective communication and interpersonal sensitivity during interactions between doctors and patients impact therapeutic outcomes. There is an important need to identify predictors of these behaviors, because traditional tests used in medical admissions offer limited predictions of “bedside manners” in medical practice. This study examined whether emotional intelligence would predict the performance of 367 medical students in medical school courses on communication and interpersonal sensitivity. One of the dimensions of emotional intelligence, the ability to regulate emotions, predicted performance in courses on communication and interpersonal sensitivity over the next 3 years of medical school, over and above cognitive ability and conscientiousness. Emotional intelligence did not predict performance on courses on medical subject domains. The results suggest that medical schools may better predict who will communicate effectively and show interpersonal sensitivity if they include measures of emotional intelligence in their admission systems.(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved)
American Psychological Association