Gates Michelle, Wingert Aireen, Featherstone Robin, Samuels Charles, Simon Christopher, Dyson Michele P
Alberta Research Centre for Health Evidence (ARCHE), Edmonton Clinic Health Academy, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Centre for Sleep and Human Performance, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2018 Sep 21;8(9):e021967. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-021967.
For physicians in independent practice, we synthesised evidence on the (1) impacts of insufficient sleep and fatigue on health and performance, and patient safety and (2) effectiveness of interventions targeting insufficient sleep and fatigue.
We systematically reviewed online literature. After piloting, one reviewer selected studies by title and abstract; full texts were then reviewed in duplicate. One reviewer extracted data; another verified a random 10% sample. Two reviewers assessed risk of bias. We pooled findings via meta-analysis when appropriate or narratively.
We searched Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL and PubMed for published studies in April 2016; Medline was updated in November 2017. We searched Embase for conference proceedings, and hand-searched meeting abstracts, association and foundation websites.
English or French language primary research studies published from 2000 to 2017 examining the effect of fatigue-related or sleep-related exposures or interventions on any outcome among physicians in independent practice and their patients.
Of 16 154 records identified, we included 47 quantitative studies of variable quality. 28 studies showed associations between fatigue or insufficient sleep and physician health and well-being outcomes. 21 studies showed no association with surgical performance, and mixed findings for psychomotor performance, work performance and medical errors. We pooled data from six cohort studies for patient outcomes. For sleep deprived versus non-sleep deprived surgeons, we found no difference in patient mortality (n=60 436, relative risk (RR) 0.98, 95% CI 0.84 to 1.15, I=0% (p=0.87)) nor postoperative complications (n=60 201, RR 0.99, 95% CI 0.95 to 1.03, I=0% (p=0.45)). The findings for intraoperative complications and length of stay were considerably heterogeneous.
Fatigue and insufficient sleep may be associated with negative physician health outcomes. Current evidence is inadequate to inform practice recommendations.
对于独立执业的医生,我们综合了以下方面的证据:(1)睡眠不足和疲劳对健康、工作表现、患者安全的影响;(2)针对睡眠不足和疲劳的干预措施的有效性。
我们系统地回顾了在线文献。在进行预试验后,一名评审员通过标题和摘要筛选研究;随后对全文进行双人评审。一名评审员提取数据;另一名评审员对随机抽取的10%样本进行核实。两名评审员评估偏倚风险。我们在适当的时候通过荟萃分析汇总研究结果,或进行描述性总结。
我们检索了Medline、Embase、PsycINFO、CINAHL和PubMed,以获取2016年4月发表的研究;2017年11月更新了Medline。我们在Embase中检索会议论文集,并手工检索会议摘要、协会和基金会网站。
2000年至2017年发表的英文或法文的原发性研究,研究疲劳相关或睡眠相关暴露或干预对独立执业医生及其患者的任何结局的影响。
在识别出的16154条记录中,我们纳入了47项质量参差不齐的定量研究。28项研究表明疲劳或睡眠不足与医生的健康和幸福结局之间存在关联。21项研究表明与手术表现无关联,关于精神运动表现、工作表现和医疗差错的研究结果不一。我们汇总了六项队列研究中关于患者结局的数据。对于睡眠剥夺组与非睡眠剥夺组的外科医生,我们发现患者死亡率无差异(n = 60436,相对风险(RR)0.98,95%置信区间0.84至1.15,I² = 0%(p = 0.87)),术后并发症也无差异(n = 60201,RR 0.99,95%置信区间0.95至1.03,I² = 0%(p = 0.45))。术中并发症和住院时间的研究结果差异很大。
疲劳和睡眠不足可能与医生的负面健康结局相关。目前的证据不足以提供实践建议。