University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Milbank Q. 2010 Sep;88(3):350-81. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2010.00603.x.
Medical educators worry that the 2003 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) duty-hour rules (DHR) have encouraged a "shift work" mentality among residents and eroded their professionalism by forcing them either to abandon patients when they have worked for eighty hours or lie about the number of hours worked. In this qualitative study, we explore how medical and surgical residents perceive and respond to DHR by examining the "local" organizational culture in which their work is embedded.
In 2008, we conducted three months of ethnographic observation of internal medicine and general surgery residents as they went about their everyday work in two hospitals affiliated with the same training program, as well as in-depth interviews with seventeen residents. Field notes and interview transcripts were analyzed for perceptions and behaviors in regard to beginning and leaving work, reporting duty hours, and expressing opinions about DHR.
The respondents did not exhibit a "shift work" mentality in relation to their work. We found that residents: (1) occasionally stay in the hospital in order to complete patient care tasks even when, according to the clock, they are required to leave, because the organizational culture stresses performing work thoroughly, (2) do not blindly embrace noncompliance with DHR but are thoughtful about the tradeoffs inherent in the regulations, and (3) express nuanced and complex reasons for erroneously reporting duty hours, suggesting that reporting hours worked is not a simple issue of lying or truth telling.
Concerns about DHR and the erosion of resident professionalism resulting from the development of a "shift work" mentality likely have been overstated. Instead, the influence of DHR on professionalism is more complex than the conventional wisdom suggests and requires additional assessment.
医学教育者担心 2003 年毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)的工作时间规定(DHR)鼓励住院医师形成“轮班工作”的心态,并通过迫使他们在工作 80 小时后要么放弃病人,要么谎报工作时间,从而侵蚀了他们的职业道德。在这项定性研究中,我们通过检查其工作所嵌入的“本地”组织文化,探讨了医疗和外科住院医师如何感知和应对 DHR。
2008 年,我们对隶属于同一培训项目的两家医院的内科和普通外科住院医师进行了为期三个月的日常工作的人种学观察,并对 17 名住院医师进行了深入访谈。对工作开始和结束、报告工作时间以及对 DHR 发表意见的看法和行为进行了现场记录和访谈记录的分析。
受访者在工作方面没有表现出“轮班工作”的心态。我们发现,住院医师:(1)偶尔会留在医院以完成患者护理任务,即使根据时钟要求他们离开,因为组织文化强调彻底完成工作;(2)不会盲目地不遵守 DHR,但会认真考虑法规中固有的权衡取舍;(3)对错误报告工作时间有细微而复杂的原因,这表明报告工作时间并非简单的撒谎或说实话问题。
对 DHR 的担忧以及由此导致的“轮班工作”心态侵蚀住院医师职业道德的可能性被夸大了。相反,DHR 对职业道德的影响比传统观念所暗示的更为复杂,需要进一步评估。