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However, multiple studies have shown that the rate of medical errors increases with 24-hour shifts. Residents working prolonged shifts are more likely to sustain needle stick injuries and be involved in motor vehicle accidents.
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Learn More »Additionally, the ACGME allowed an exception to the 16-hour work limit for interns participating in the iCOMPARE research trial. The study’s aim was to determine how “flexible shifts” of up to 30 hours for interns versus the new standard 16-hour shifts affected education, sleep, and patient outcomes. The findings of iCOMPARE were published in NEJM in 2018 and 2019, and have been used to justify the latest changes in resident work hours. Yet the studies have important flaws. For patient outcomes, the study measured 30-day patient mortality and hospital readmission rates and no difference was found between programs with shifts up to 30 hours versus shorter, 16-hour-shifts. This finding has been mentioned in the press, and in the researchers’ talking points, the claim is that longer shifts don’t negatively impact patient outcomes in general. However, the outcomes measured in the trial don’t capture the day-to-day experiences of interns’ clinical care. They don’t tell us if the more sleep-deprived interns made more medication errors, or if they took longer to recognize clinical changes in their patients, or if they were less attentive to patient experiences like pain control. The sleep outcomes the researchers measured were also flawed. They focused on average sleep over two weeks. As one of the researchers, Dr. Mathias Basner, explained, “Interns in flexible programs were able to compensate for the sleep lost during extended overnight shifts by using strategic sleep opportunities before and after shifts and on days off.” This reasoning defies what most human beings know from lived experience: even if you get extra sleep on the weekend, pulling an all-nighter is an acute form of sleep deprivation with a negative impact on alertness, response time, and mood. The iCOMPARE study did, however, find one significant difference between the two groups with different hours: the interns’ own experiences. Interns with longer shifts reported a negative impact on their morale, health, and overall well-being, as well as on educational experiences like pursuing research and teaching medical students. With longer hours, interns were roughly twice as likely to feel that their fatigue negatively affected their personal safety and their patients’ safety. Remarkably, despite these concerning reports from the interns themselves, the study results were actually used to justify the longer hours and reverse a prior cap of 16 hours for interns. Meanwhile, 80% of respondents in a public survey reported that they would want a different doctor if they found out their doctor had been awake for over 24 hours. On June 25, NEJM published a new study comparing the rates of medical errors made by resident physicians working 16-hour shifts versus 24-or-more-hour shifts. Overall, they found that the residents working the longer shifts actually made fewer errors. However, when they controlled for how many patients each resident was responsible for, the results were inconsistent. At hospitals where residents already had high patient work loads, they made fewer mistakes with longer shifts. But when residents had lower patient work loads, more errors were made on longer shifts. As the number and complexity of patients cared for is a major factor in patient safety, these inconsistent results make it difficult to draw conclusions about work hours from this study.
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Learn More »Medicine strives to be evidence-based. The work-hour studies are intended to provide a rational scientific approach to making resident schedules. But the work-hour studies thus far are flawed. Those engaging in discussions around work hours need to be aware of these studies’ limitations. In addition to being evidence-based, decisions around work hours must also be ethical. When resident physicians speak out about long hours, our dedication to our patients and the profession are often called into question. That makes it very hard for us to bring our own difficult experiences into the conversation. For many, speaking up is not worth the risk. It is only now, having completed my three-year internal medicine residency and matched at a pulmonary and critical care fellowship that does not require 24-hour call for its fellows or internal medicine residents, that I have the professional security to address this issue so publicly. I have looked into the studies around work hours so that I may be an informed participant in this discussion. But I worry that the framework of evidence-based medicine applied to the question of work hours is a way of seeking scientific justification for the exploitation of vulnerable workers with little power to advocate for themselves. Ultimately, I am opposed to 24-hour in-hospital shifts first and foremost because they are unethical. Requiring resident physicians to work more than 24 hours consecutively, without any guaranteed time to rest, is simply inhumane. As medical educators continue discussions on work hours, I urge them to remember this is not just a question of evidence, but one of ethics and how those with power treat those who rely on them. Colleen M. Farrell, MD is a pulmonary and critical care fellow in New York City. Follow her on Twitter @colleenmfarrell.
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