Part 1: Compassion
Straus et al. 2016
Straus et al started from a scientific problem; compassion is widely valued, yet poorly defined and
inadequately measured.
Compassion is central in healthcare, education and moral philosophy. It is evolutionary and has
measurable clinical consequences; it improves patient satisfaction, communication, stress
regulation and recovery from psychopathology. However, there is no consensus definition, and no
psychometrically robust measure. Without this, we can’t properly compare studies or evaluate
compassion-based interventions. This is what straus et al. addressed.
No concensus definition
Across the literature, compassion is generally described as being moved by suffering and wanting to
help. Examples;
- Lazarus: being moved by another’s suffering and wanting to help
- Goetz; the feeling that arises when witnessing suffering and motivates helping.
- The dalai lama; openness to suffering with a commitment to relieve it.
However, the definitions differ in emphasis
- Some stress emotional resonance
- Others emphasize cognitive understanding
- Some include regulatory components such as non-judgement or distress tolerance
- Some focus only on action
From 3 to 5
Kanov et al (2004) described compassion as three core facets
- Noticing suffering
- Feeling concern
- Responding
Gilbert et al (2010) expanded this by conceptualizing compassion as an evolved motivational system
and adding
- Distress tolerance (= the ability to remain open to suffering without becoming overwhelmed
by one’s own discomfort.)
- Non-judgments
Neff (2003) proposed three components
- Kindness
- Mindfullnes
- Common humanity (= the idea that suffering is part of the shared human experience)
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Five elements of compassion (Straus)
Based on this, Straus proposed a five-element definition. Compassion is defined as a cognitive,
affective, and behavioral process consisting of;
1. Recognizing suffering
2. Understanding the universality of suffering in human experience
3. Feeling empathy for the person suffering and emotionally connecting with the distress
(emotional resonance)
4. Tolerating uncomfortable feelings that arise in response to suffering, thereby remaining
open and non-judgmental
5. Motivation to act or acting to alleviate suffering.
This definition integrates emotional, cognitive and behavioral components and applies to both self-
compassion and compassion for others. Importantly, no other definition included all 5 elements
together.
Compassion vs. empathy
Empathy can be divided into cognitive empathy (=understanding another’s perspective) and effective
empathy (=sharing another’s’ emotional state). Empathy does not necessary involve action.
Compassion is specifically a response to suffering. It includes empathy but goes beyond it.
Compassion requires distress tolerance and motivation to alleviate suffering.
Empathy without distress tolerance may lead to empathic distress and burnout.
Are self-compassion and compassion for others the same?
From a Buddhist perspective separating self-and other-compassion is artificial; self-compassion is
considered a prerequisite for compassion towards others.
However, empirical research found other;
- Neff and pommier (2013) and pommier (2010) found no correlation between these
This needs further investigation
Why measurements matter
Without reliable and valid measures, we can’t confidently assess compassion levels, or rigorously
evaluate compassion based interventions. Therefore, the autors call for;
1. Development of a new measure aligned with the five-element definition
2. Empirical testing of the 5-element model
3. Strong psychometric evaluation
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Van lotringen et al (2021)
Central question: what happens to the therapeutic alliance (= collaborative aspects of the relationship
between therapist and client) in text-based digital psychotherapy, and can this be applied responsibly?
Therapeutic alliance is widely considered one of the strongest predictions of psychotherapy outcome.
can a bond develop without physical presence? Does the lack of non-verbal cues weaken the
relationship? And if it changes, it is still responsible?
Bordins working alliance model (1979/1994)
Consist of 3 components.
1. Agreement on therapy goals (what they are working
towards)
2. Agreement on therapy tasks (what needs to be done)
3. Bond (mutual trust, acceptance, confidence between
therapist and client
Text-based digital psychotherapy
All forms of therapy with a ‘delay’: email, messages, written
feedback, text-based chats.
Most interventions in the review were internet based, asynchronous (replies within 24-48 hours),
weekly contact and 8-10 weeks duration.
so commination was delayed and reflective. This matters because the main concern is whether
alliance can develop without real-time and nonverbal interaction
Pro’s and con’s
Results
Most studies used were the Working Alliance Inventory. The WAI measures Goals, Tasks and Bond
WAI in text-based digital psychotherapy = 5.66.
WAI in face-to-face therapy = 5.87.
So, the alliance in text-based therapy appears to be comparable to face to face therapy. This
challenges the assumption that digital therapy is relationally inferior.
The alliance-outcome association is similar online and offline. Therefore, the alliance that develops
digitally is not superficial — it functions similarly in predicting improvement.
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Can text-based digital psychotherapy be applied responsibly?
Why it can be responsible:
1. A good therapeutic alliance can be established
2. Alliance predicts treatment outcomes
3. Client satisfaction is strongly linked to alliance
4. Text-based therapy may even increase openness
Thus: text-based digital psychotherapy can be s responsible alternative or addition to face-to-face
therapy, especially for anxiety and depression
Limitations
The paper is crucial about measurement;
1. The alliance is dynamic (it fluctuates over time)
a. Most studies measured only at one point. This misses ruptures, repair preces and
fluctuations
2. The WAI was not developed for digital contexts
a. It was designed for face to face
b. It is old (1989)
c. Not sure if it measures compassion, empathy, emotional resonance or digital-specific
relational dynamics.
3. Missing elements like compassion
Also, most studies were conducted in north Europe, and mostly CBT, mostly anxiety and depression,
and mostly female not very representive