Niederee Mark J, Knudtson Jason L, Byrnes Matthew C, Helmer Stephen D, Smith R Stephen
Department of Surgery, University of Kansas School of Medicine, Wichita 67214-3882, USA.
Arch Surg. 2003 Jun;138(6):663-9; discussion 669-71. doi: 10.1001/archsurg.138.6.663.
Surgical faculty and residents have significantly different attitudes regarding work hour restrictions.
All general surgery residencies approved by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME).
All voluntarily participating surgical faculty and residents.
Current hours worked, days off per month, and attitudes and opinions regarding the current surgical-training environment.
A 17-question survey instrument was mailed to the program directors of all ACGME-approved surgical-training programs in the United States. They were requested to distribute the survey to all faculty and residents for completion and to return the forms for analysis.
Responses (N = 1653) were received from 46% of surgical-training programs. A significant difference was noted between faculty and resident responses in most categories. Most residents (87%) reported more than 80 duty hours per week, whereas 45% reported working more than 100 hours per week. Only 30% of residents reported an average of 1 day per week free of clinical activities. Although a minority of residents (43%) felt that their workload was excessive, 57% felt that their cognitive abilities had been impaired by fatigue. A significant number of residents (64%) and faculty (39%) believe that duty hour restrictions should be adopted. A minority of residents (20%) and faculty (47%) believe that the duration of residency training should be increased to compensate for duty hour restrictions. One quarter of residents regret choosing a career in surgery.
Current duty hours for most surgical residents exceed the proposed ACGME limits. Although most residents support duty hour limits; surgical faculty are less supportive. Significant alterations in the current design and structure of surgical-training programs will be required to meet the ACGME guidelines.
外科教员和住院医师对工作时间限制的态度存在显著差异。
所有经毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)批准的普通外科住院医师培训项目。
所有自愿参与的外科教员和住院医师。
当前工作时长、每月休息日以及对当前外科培训环境的态度和看法。
向美国所有经ACGME批准的外科培训项目的项目主任邮寄一份包含17个问题的调查问卷。要求他们将问卷分发给所有教员和住院医师以完成填写,并将表格返还进行分析。
收到了46%的外科培训项目的回复(N = 1653)。在大多数类别中,教员和住院医师的回复存在显著差异。大多数住院医师(87%)报告每周值班时间超过80小时,而45%报告每周工作超过100小时。只有30%的住院医师报告平均每周有1天没有临床活动。尽管少数住院医师(43%)认为他们的工作量过大,但57%认为疲劳已损害了他们的认知能力。相当多的住院医师(64%)和教员(39%)认为应采用值班时间限制。少数住院医师(20%)和教员(47%)认为应延长住院医师培训时间以弥补值班时间限制。四分之一的住院医师后悔选择外科职业。
大多数外科住院医师目前的值班时间超过了ACGME提议的限制。尽管大多数住院医师支持值班时间限制,但外科教员的支持度较低。要符合ACGME指南,需要对当前外科培训项目的设计和结构进行重大调整。