Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2013 Sep;28(9):1238-40. doi: 10.1007/s11606-013-2439-8.
The circumstances that led to the death of Libby Zion in 1984 prompted national discussions about the impact of resident fatigue on patient outcomes. Nearly 30 years later, national duty hour reforms largely motivated by patient safety concerns have demonstrated a negligible impact of duty hour reductions on patient mortality. We suggest that the lack of an impact of duty hour reforms on patient mortality is due to a different medical landscape today than existed in 1984. Improvements in quality of care made possible by computerized order entry, automated medication checks, inpatient pharmacists, and increased resident supervision have, among other systemic changes, diminished the adverse impact that resident fatigue is able to have on patient outcomes. Given this new medical landscape, advocacy towards current and future duty hour reforms may be best justified by evidence of the impact of duty hour reform on resident wellbeing, education, and burnout.
1984 年利比·齐昂(Libby Zion)的死亡事件促使全国范围内展开了关于住院医师疲劳对患者预后影响的讨论。近 30 年后,出于对患者安全的关注,全国范围内的工时改革主要旨在减少住院医师的工作时间,但这些改革对患者死亡率的影响微不足道。我们认为,工时改革对患者死亡率没有影响,这是由于今天的医疗环境与 1984 年不同。通过计算机医嘱录入、自动药物检查、住院药师和增加住院医师监督等系统变化,使得医疗质量得到了提高,减轻了住院医师疲劳对患者预后的不利影响。鉴于这种新的医疗环境,目前和未来的工时改革的倡导,最好通过工时改革对住院医师的健康、教育和职业倦怠的影响的证据来证明。