4.5 Article

The 80-hour work guidelines and resident survey perceptions of quality

Journal

JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 135, Issue 2, Pages 275-281

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jss.2006.04.010

Keywords

80 hour workweek; surgical residents; ACGME work guidelines; quality; medical error; continuity of care; miscommunication; cross coverage; work hour reduction

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Objective. We hypothesized that resident fatigue error should improve, related to well-rested trainees as a direct cause/effect benefit. However, patient hospital care quality is multifactorial, so impact on patient care quality by changing only one variable for a single caregiver group was unknown. Design and participants. Convenience samples of 156 residents from three surgical specialties were administered a questionnaire in early 2004 addressing perceptions of patient care quality before and after the 80-h workweek. Additionally, residents recently under work-hour restrictions (Newly Restricted, NR) were compared to New York state trainees already regulated by work-hour restrictions (Previously Restricted, PR). Setting. Surgical residency training venues. Main outcome measure. Survey results; the level of significance for all tests was 0.05. Results. The participation response rate was 94.5%. Eighty-eight percent of respondents indicated by survey subjective impression, that patient care quality was either unchanged (63%) or worse (26%) due to work-hour restrictions (P = 0.003). PR residents were more likely than NR residents to report unchanged or worse quality of care (P = 0.015). Residents overall did perceive improvement in some types of error with fewer fatigue-related errors (P < 0.001), e.g., medication (P < 0.001), judgment (P = 0.001), and dexterity (P = 0.013), subsequent to work-hour restrictions. However, more errors were perceived related to con-tinuity of care (P < 0.001), miscommunication (P 0.001), and cross-coverage availability (P = 0.001). Conclusions. Despite an expected perception of improvement in fatigue-related errors, most participants (particularly PR residents) reported impressions that patient care quality had remained unchanged or had declined under the work-hour restrictions. Unresolved challenges with continuity of care, miscommunication, and cross-coverage availability are possible explanations. Mere work-hour reduction does not appear to improve patient care quality automatically nor to decrease the possibility for some types of error. Process interventions that specifically target trainee sign-out coverage constraints as part of a global reassessment will be important for future attempts to enhance quality hospital patient care. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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