Study Proves Current Work Hour Guidelines For Interns Are Unsafe
Main Category: Medical Students / TrainingArticle Date: 17 Jan 2005 - 13:00 PDT
'Study Proves Current Work Hour Guidelines For Interns Are Unsafe'
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The American Medical Student Association (AMSA), the nation's largest, independent medical student organization, commends the study, "Extended Work Shifts and the Risk of Motor Vehicle Crashes Among Interns," to be published in tomorrow's New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) as further evidence of the need for improvements in work hour regulations. As part of the Harvard Work Hours, Health, and Safety study, this research illustrates that residents face increased safety risks when subjected to extended work hours.
The study found that for every extended shift in a month, an intern's risk of a motor vehicle crash increases by over 16 percent during their commute. Forty-one percent of the reported motor vehicle crashes included significant damage and were caused on the commute from work. The authors note that the findings "have implications for medical residency programs, which routinely schedule physicians to work more than 24 consecutive hours."
Over one year ago, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education implemented guidelines for resident work hours, which state that residents cannot work over 30 hours per shift. AMSA believes that this six-hour deviation needs to be amended, as these work shifts are unsafe for residents, patients and motorists.
The study reports that interns worked shifts averaging 32 hours and on 86 percent of the participating interns' monthly surveys, interns reported working extended shifts without any night-float coverage. These data illustrate that many residency programs are not even adhering to the current guidelines-forcing residents to work extended hours despite the increased safety concerns.
"Evidence continues to build that physicians working extended hours are putting themselves as well as their patients at risk," says Dr. Brian Palmer, AMSA national president. "Physicians are being forced to work more consecutive hours than deemed safe-almost the entire workweek of another profession-then drive. It's time to demand an improved working environment that ensures patient and physician safety without compromising medical education."
AMSA supports the Patient and Physician Safety and Protection Act, which would enforce work hour regulations through civil penalties rather than a loss of accreditation and appropriate needed funds for hospitals to hire more auxiliary staff, and provide whistleblower protection to resident physicians who report violations.
For more information on the work hour debate, please visit: http://www.amsa.org/hp/reswork.cfm. If you would like to speak with a resident on this topic, please contact AMSA: (703) 620-6600 ext. 207.
About the American Medical Student Association
The American Medical Student Association (AMSA), with more than a half-century history of medical student activism, is the oldest and largest independent association of physicians-in-training in the United States. Founded in 1950, AMSA is a student-governed, non-profit organization committed to representing the concerns of physicians-in-training. With nearly 50,000 members, including medical and premedical students, residents and practicing physicians, AMSA is committed to improving medical training as well as advancing the profession of medicine. AMSA focuses on four strategic priorities, including universal healthcare, disparities in medicine, diversity in medicine and transforming the culture of medical education. To learn more about AMSA, our strategic priorities, or joining the organization, please visit us online at http://www.amsa.org.
Kim Becker, Director of Public Relations
American Medical Student Association
Phone: (703) 620-6600, ext. 207
Email: prel@www.amsa.org
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MLA
25 May. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/18966.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/18966.php.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
Proving the obvious
posted by John Doe on 17 Jan 2005 at 10:31 pmSo going 24 - 36 hours straight impairs judgement to the point where it's unsafe to drive. Truck drivers and airline pilots have known that for years and there are mandatory rest periods for them. What's really disturbing is the fact that these doctors are required to practice medicine in this impaired state.
Do we really need a scientifically rigorous study charting medical mistakes as a function of the doctor's work hours to prove what is already obvious? I'd hate to be the patient seen by one of these medical interns just before they drove home.
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