Landrigan Christopher P, Fahrenkopf Amy M, Lewin Daniel, Sharek Paul J, Barger Laura K, Eisner Melanie, Edwards Sarah, Chiang Vincent W, Wiedermann Bernhard L, Sectish Theodore C
Division of Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 221 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Pediatrics. 2008 Aug;122(2):250-8. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-2306.
To mitigate the risks of fatigue-related medical errors, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education introduced work hour limits for resident physicians in 2003. Our goal was to determine whether work hours, sleep, and safety changed after implementation of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education standards.
We conducted a prospective cohort study in which residents from 3 large pediatric training programs provided daily reports of work hours and sleep. In addition, they completed reports of near-miss and actual motor vehicle crashes, occupational exposures, self-reported medical errors, and ratings of educational experience. They were screened for depression and burnout. Concurrently, at 2 of the centers, data on medication errors were collected prospectively by using an established active surveillance method.
A total of 220 residents provided 6007 daily reports of their work hours and sleep, and 16 158 medication orders were reviewed. Although scheduling changes were made in each program to accommodate the standards, 24- to 30-hour shifts remained common, and the frequency of residents' call remained largely unchanged. There was no change in residents' measured total work hours or sleep hours. There was no change in the overall rate of medication errors, and there was a borderline increase in the rate of resident physician ordering errors, from 1.06 to 1.38 errors per 100 patient-days. Rates of motor vehicle crashes, occupational exposures, depression, and self-reported medical errors and overall ratings of work and educational experiences did not change. The mean length of extended-duration (on-call) shifts decreased 2.7% to 28.5 hours, and rates of resident burnout decreased significantly (from 75.4% to 57.0%).
Total hours of work and sleep did not change after implementation of the duty hour standards. Although fewer residents were burned out, rates of medication errors, resident depression, and resident injuries and educational ratings did not improve.
为降低与疲劳相关的医疗差错风险,毕业后医学教育认证委员会于2003年对住院医师的工作时长进行了限制。我们的目标是确定毕业后医学教育认证委员会标准实施后工作时长、睡眠及安全性是否发生了变化。
我们开展了一项前瞻性队列研究,来自3个大型儿科培训项目的住院医师每日报告工作时长和睡眠情况。此外,他们还完成了关于险些发生及实际发生的机动车碰撞、职业暴露、自我报告的医疗差错以及教育体验评分的报告。对他们进行了抑郁和职业倦怠筛查。同时,在其中2个中心,采用既定的主动监测方法前瞻性收集用药差错数据。
共有220名住院医师提供了6007份关于其工作时长和睡眠的每日报告,共审查了16158份用药医嘱。尽管每个项目都进行了排班调整以符合标准,但24至30小时的轮班仍然常见,住院医师值班的频率基本未变。住院医师的实测总工作时长和睡眠时间没有变化。用药差错的总体发生率没有变化,住院医师开医嘱错误率略有上升,从每100个患者日1.06次错误增至1.38次错误。机动车碰撞、职业暴露、抑郁、自我报告的医疗差错发生率以及工作和教育体验的总体评分均未改变。延长时长(值班)轮班的平均时长减少了2.7%,降至28.5小时,住院医师职业倦怠率显著下降(从75.4%降至57.0%)。
实施值班时长标准后,工作和睡眠的总时长没有变化。尽管住院医师职业倦怠的人数减少了,但用药差错率、住院医师抑郁率、住院医师受伤率以及教育评分并未改善。