Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC.
Crit Care Med. 2012 Mar;40(3):960-6. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e3182413bc5.
Inadequate sleep and long work hours are long-standing traditions in the medical profession, and work schedules are especially intense in resident physicians. However, it has been increasingly recognized that the extreme hours commonly worked by residents may have substantial occupational and patient safety consequences. Largely because of these concerns, new regulations related to resident work hours came into effect July 2011, in the United States. Residents in their first year of training are now restricted to a maximum shift length of 16 hrs, with residents in subsequent years restricted to a maximum of 24 hrs. The purpose of this review is to summarize the literature regarding resident work hours in the intensive care unit, focusing on the potential positive and negative impacts of work hour limits.
The authors electronically searched MEDLINE, manually searched reference lists from retrieved articles, and reviewed their own personal databases for articles relevant to resident work hour limits.
To function well, humans, including physicians, require adequate sleep. Resident work hour limits will likely reduce the incidence of fatigue-related medical errors and improve resident safety and quality of life. However, a reduction in work hours may not represent the panacea for patient safety given the potential for increased errors because of discontinuity. Furthermore, there may be other substantial negative impacts, including reduced clinical exposure, erosion of professionalism, and inadequate preparation for independent practice. Costs of implementation are likely to be substantial.
Currently, there is fairly limited evidence available, and a more in-depth understanding of this complex topic is required to design a residency experience that will provide the next generation of physicians the best compromise between education, experience, and quality patient care. In the end, the primary goal of the postgraduate medical education system must be to ensure the creation of healthy physicians who can provide excellent clinical care in this complex interdisciplinary medical industry and who will have long fulfilling careers providing this outstanding care to their patients.
睡眠不足和长时间工作是医学专业由来已久的传统,住院医师的工作时间表尤其紧张。然而,人们越来越认识到,住院医师通常工作的极端时间可能会对职业和患者安全产生重大影响。主要是由于这些担忧,与住院医师工作时间相关的新规定于 2011 年 7 月在美国生效。培训第一年的住院医师现在最长工作时间限制为 16 小时,随后几年的住院医师最长工作时间限制为 24 小时。本综述的目的是总结关于重症监护病房住院医师工作时间的文献,重点关注工作时间限制的潜在积极和负面影响。
作者通过电子方式在 MEDLINE 上搜索,手动搜索检索文章的参考文献列表,并审查了自己个人数据库中与住院医师工作时间限制相关的文章。
为了正常运作,人类(包括医生)需要充足的睡眠。住院医师工作时间限制可能会减少与疲劳相关的医疗错误,并提高住院医师的安全性和生活质量。然而,减少工作时间可能并不能代表解决患者安全问题的灵丹妙药,因为连续性中断可能会导致更多的错误。此外,还可能存在其他重大负面影响,包括临床接触减少、职业精神侵蚀和独立实践准备不足。实施成本可能很高。
目前,可用的证据相当有限,需要更深入地了解这个复杂的主题,以便设计一种住院医师体验,为下一代医生在教育、经验和优质患者护理之间提供最佳折衷。最终,研究生医学教育系统的主要目标必须是确保培养出健康的医生,他们能够在这个复杂的跨学科医疗行业中提供卓越的临床护理,并在他们的职业生涯中为他们的患者提供这种出色的护理。