How Tired Is
Your Doctor?
By Carolyn M.
Clancy, M.D.
March 3, 2009
The pilot who
safely ditched the U.S. Airways jet into the
Hudson River drew on years of skill, training,
and sound judgment in the critical moments
before landing.
Chesley "Sully"
Sullenberger and his crew reacted calmly while
facing potential disaster. The miraculous
outcome drew attention to the pilot’s skill and
courage in an extraordinarily stressful
situation.
One
variable - limits on pilots’ work hours - also
played a positive, if hidden, role. To reduce
the risk of error caused by fatigue, pilots
cannot fly more than 8 straight hours, according
to airline industry and Government rules.
Like piloting a
jetliner, some medical situations, especially in
the hospital, also have life-and-death
consequences. You might be surprised to know
that, until recently, doctors who train in
hospitals, called medical residents, did not
have limits on their work hours.
Before limits
were put in place, some residents worked more
than 100 hours each week. And a resident’s day
could last 36 hours or longer. Cases came to
light showing that doctors who worked these long
hours were more likely to make errors?sometimes
very serious ones?when taking care of patients.
A weekly
80-hour limit
for medical residents was put into effect across
the United States in 2003. Unlike the work-hour
limit for pilots, the rule for medical residents
is voluntary. It also lets residents work up to
30 hours in a row as long as they do not take
care of patients after they’ve worked 24 hours.
Nearly 6 years
later, are we safe from the errors an overly
tired medical resident might make?
Not likely, says
a recent report from the Institute of Medicine
(IOM). A year-long review found that residents
still aren’t getting enough time to sleep and
require more protection of the 80-hour limit.
The study was funded by my Agency, the Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
Specifically, the
report found that many hospitals do not follow
through on the 80-hour work limits. It also
found that people aren’t reporting violations of
the rules to the agency that that oversees
training programs. This is often due to
residents’ fear that reporting the hospital
could hurt their careers.
In its
recent report
,
the IOM described what it would take to protect
residents from ongoing or serious fatigue. It
said hospitals should allow residents to work
only 16 consecutive hours when they are treating
patients. After that, they should have an
uninterrupted 5-hour sleep period.
Other changes called the IOM called for
include:
-
Increasing work-hour oversight:
More reviews should be conducted to ensure
hospitals follow the work-hour rules.
Residents and others who complain that the
rules aren’t being followed should be
protected.
-
Providing days off: Residents
should get a 24-hour break from duty each
week and get one 48-hour break each month.
-
Giving residents safe transportation after
long shifts: AHRQ research has
shown that residents who work extra-long
shifts are more than twice as likely to have
auto accidents.
-
Training on better communications during
handovers: Many errors happen when
a patient’s care is taken over by another
doctor. If doctors work shorter hours, these
handoffs will occur more often. Therefore,
residents need better training on how to
communicate with the new doctor and others
about the patient’s care.
I realize that
patients can’t tell how long their doctors have
been awake or if their judgment is affected by
fatigue.
What you or a
family member can do is to take as much
information as you can to the hospital. Bring a
complete list of the medicines you are
taking. That way, your medical team will have
this information even if your doctor forgets to
ask.
Don’t be
surprised if you see new people taking care of
you, but don’t be afraid to ask who’s in charge
of your care. As I always advise,
ask questions.
For too long, our
system of medical training has overlooked the
risks that come when residents work extreme
hours. That has slowly begun to change, but this
change must continue.
I’m Dr. Carolyn
Clancy, and that’s my advice on how to navigate
the health care system.
More Information
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
New Report Recommends Strategies to Reduce
Medical Resident Fatigue-Related Errors and
Improve Training
Press release, December 2, 2008
http://www.ahrq.gov/news/press/pr2008/iomrespr.htm
Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality
Check Your Medicines: Tips for Using
Medicines Safely
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/checkmeds.htm
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Questions are the Answer: Build Your
Question List
http://www.ahrq.gov/questionsaretheanswer/questionBuilder.aspx
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical
Education
Duty Hours Language
http://www.acgme.org/acWebsite/dutyHours/dh_index.asp

Institute
of Medicine
Resident Duty Hours: Enhancing Sleep,
Supervision, and Safety
http://www.iom.edu/CMS/3809/48553/60449.aspx

Current as of March 2009
Internet Citation:
How Tired Is Your Doctor? Navigating
the Health Care System: Advice Columns from Dr.
Carolyn Clancy, March 3, 2009. Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD.
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/cc/cc030309.htm
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