Effects of Work Hour Reduction on Residents’ Lives
Top Cited Papers
- 7 September 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 294 (9) , 1088-1100
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.294.9.1088
Abstract
ContextThe Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education implemented mandatory work hour limitations in July 2003, partly out of concern for residents’ well-being in the setting of sleep deprivation. These limitations are likely to also have an impact on other aspects of the lives of residents.ObjectiveTo summarize the literature regarding the effect of interventions to reduce resident work hours on residents’ education and quality of life.Data SourcesWe searched the English-language literature about resident work hours from 1966 through April 2005 using MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Current Contents, supplemented with hand-search of additional journals, reference list review, and review of abstracts from national meetings.Study SelectionStudies were included that assessed a system change designed to counteract the effects of resident work hours, fatigue, or sleep deprivation; included an outcome directly related to residents; and were conducted in the United States.Data ExtractionFor each included study, 2 investigators independently abstracted data related to study quality, subjects, interventions, and findings using a standard data abstraction form.Data SynthesisFifty-four articles met inclusion criteria. The interventions used to decrease resident work hours varied but included night and day float teams, extra cross-coverage, and physician extenders. Outcomes included measures of resident education (operative experience, test scores, satisfaction) and quality of residents’ lives (amount of sleep, well-being). Interventions to reduce resident work hours resulted in mixed effects on both operative experience and on perceived educational quality but generally improved residents’ quality of life. Many studies had major limitations in their design or conduct.ConclusionsPast interventions suggest that residents’ quality of life may improve with work hour limitations, but interpretation of the outcomes of these studies is hampered by suboptimal study design and the use of nonvalidated instruments. The long-term impact of reducing resident work hours on education remains unknown. Current and future interventions should be evaluated with more rigorous methods and should investigate links between residents’ quality of life and quality of patient care.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Extended Work Shifts and the Risk of Motor Vehicle Crashes among InternsNew England Journal of Medicine, 2005
- Balancing Continuity of Care with Residents??? Limited Work Hours: Defining the ImplicationsAcademic Medicine, 2005
- Systematic Review: Effects of Resident Work Hours on Patient SafetyAnnals of Internal Medicine, 2004
- Resident Work Hours: The Five Stages of GriefAcademic Medicine, 2004
- New Requirements for Resident Duty HoursJAMA, 2002
- Factors affecting performance on the American Board of Surgery in-training examinationThe American Journal of Surgery, 2001
- How to Conduct Surveys—A Step-By-Step GuideTechnometrics, 1999
- Effect of sleep deprivation on surgeons' dexterity on laparoscopy simulatorThe Lancet, 1998
- The effect of fatigue, sleep deprivation and onerous working hours on the physical and mental wellbeing of pre-registration house officersIrish Journal of Medical Science, 1998
- Young hospital doctors after night duty: their task-specific cognitive status and emotional conditionMedical Education, 1994