Shelton Julia, Kummerow Kristy, Phillips Sharon, Arbogast Patrick G, Griffin Marie, Holzman Michael D, Nealon William, Poulose Benjamin K
Division of General Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
Division of General Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
J Surg Educ. 2014 Jul-Aug;71(4):551-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2013.12.011. Epub 2014 Apr 19.
In 2003, duty-hour regulations (DHR) were initially implemented for residents in the United States to improve patient safety and protect resident's well-being. The effect of DHR on patient safety remains unclear. The study objective was to evaluate the effect of DHR on patient safety.
Using an interrupted time series analysis, we analyzed selected patient safety indicators (PSIs) for 376 million discharges in teaching (T) vs nonteaching (NT) hospitals before and after implementation of DHR in 2003 that restricted resident work hours to 80 hours per week. The PSIs evaluated were postoperative pulmonary embolus or deep venous thrombosis (PEDVT), iatrogenic pneumothorax (PTx), accidental puncture or laceration, postoperative wound dehiscence (WD), postoperative hemorrhage or hematoma, and postoperative physiologic or metabolic derangement. Propensity scores were used to adjust for differences in patient comorbidities between T and NT hospitals and between discharge quarters. The primary outcomes were differences in the PSI rates before and after DHR implementation. The PSI differences between T and NT institutions were the secondary outcome.
T and NT hospitals in the United States.
Participants were 376 million patient discharges from 1998 to 2007 in the Nationwide Inpatient Sample.
Declining rates of PTx in both T and NT hospitals preintervention slowed only in T hospitals postintervention (p = 0.04). Increasing PEDVT rates in both T and NT hospitals increased further only in NT hospitals (p = 0.01). There were no differences in the PSI rates over time for hemorrhage or hematoma, physiologic or metabolic derangement, accidental puncture or laceration, or WD. T hospitals had higher rates than NT hospitals both preintervention and postintervention for all the PSIs except WD.
Trends in rates for 2 of the 6 PSIs changed significantly after DHR implementation, with PTx rates worsening in T hospitals and PEDVT rates worsening in NT hospitals. Lack of consistent patterns of change suggests no measurable effect of the policy change on these PSIs.
2003年,美国开始初步实施工作时间规定(DHR),以提高患者安全并保障住院医师的健康。DHR对患者安全的影响尚不清楚。本研究的目的是评估DHR对患者安全的影响。
采用中断时间序列分析,我们分析了2003年实施DHR(将住院医师工作时间限制为每周80小时)前后,教学医院(T)和非教学医院(NT)中3.76亿例出院患者的选定患者安全指标(PSI)。评估的PSI包括术后肺栓塞或深静脉血栓形成(PEDVT)、医源性气胸(PTx)、意外穿刺或撕裂伤、术后伤口裂开(WD)、术后出血或血肿以及术后生理或代谢紊乱。倾向得分用于调整T医院与NT医院之间以及出院季度之间患者合并症的差异。主要结局是DHR实施前后PSI率的差异。T医院与NT医院之间的PSI差异为次要结局。
美国的教学医院和非教学医院。
参与者为1998年至2007年全国住院患者样本中的3.76亿例出院患者。
干预前T医院和NT医院中PTx率的下降趋势在干预后仅在T医院放缓(p = 0.04)。T医院和NT医院中PEDVT率的上升趋势仅在NT医院进一步加剧(p = 0.01)。出血或血肿、生理或代谢紊乱、意外穿刺或撕裂伤或WD随时间的PSI率没有差异。除WD外,所有PSI在干预前和干预后T医院的发生率均高于NT医院。
实施DHR后,6项PSI中的2项发生率趋势发生了显著变化,T医院的PTx率恶化,NT医院的PEDVT率恶化。缺乏一致的变化模式表明政策变化对这些PSI没有可衡量的影响。