Blog Archives

Sleep Deprivation is a Form of Torture

As a resident, I spent one horrific week on my surgical rotation clocking 138 hours in the hospital…and I slept only 6 1/2 of those. By the end of the week, I had decided to quit residency. Fortunately, a good night’s sleep helped me turn that decision around.

Pauline Chen MD recently wrote a piece in the New York Times called “The Impossible Workload for Doctors in Training” in which she argued that the ACGME’s (Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education) work hour improvements over the last decade have not been effective. After the Libby Zion case, the ACGME started mandating fewer work hours for residents for their safety and the safety of their patients. The most recent (2011) rules do not allow interns to work more than 16 consecutive hours.

Dr. Chen’s point is that because the volume of work has increased, limiting the number of hours has not been an adequate way to address the problem of over-tired residents. In other words, even if someone is working fewer hours, if she’s managing many more patients in a shorter time period, safety is still a major concern. There are studies and anecdotes to support her assertion that are cited within the article.

Of course, the solution is not to go back to the previous work hours –  nor to continue as is. More funding needs to be allotted to residency positions. Not only would this alleviate the workload problem, it would mitigate the physician shortage crisis. We have a lot of medical students; the bottle neck comes in residency positions. If we had more training spots, we could train more doctors and consequently, offer more primary and preventive care, while providing increased safety to residents and their patients. It would be a win-win-win.

That week on my surgical rotation was particularly bad, but I had many, many others that were also minimally human. We would not accept heavy or dangerous work loads for pilots or police officers. We need to reject them for doctors-in-training as well.

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It Gets Better

In honor of the Dan Savage’s “It Gets Better” campaign, I thought I would dedicate this blog entry to those who are in medical training and are struggling. (And who isn’t?!)

Despite the relatively warm winter many of us are experiencing, this time of year can be particularly rough for medical students and residents trying to get through classes and rotations. As a practicing MD, I want to let you know that it gets better! For every medical student, resident or fellow who has heard an attending physician say, “If you think training is hard, wait until you’re done,” I say, “Don’t believe that silly doctor!” Once you get through this tough time, you can look forward to more autonomy and a happier lifestyle.

I wish someone had told me all of this when I was going through training. It really gets better!

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Resident Work Hours

I was pretty disappointed with the responses Dr. Thomas J. Nasca, the executive director of the ACGME (Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education), made in a recent interview with Pauline Chen from the New York Times about resident work hours.

Dr. Nasca’s point is that physicians in training need to put their patients’ needs over their own, being prepared to suffer extended work hours. Of course professionalism dictates that the patient’s well being is paramount but not at the expense of the doctor’s safety. Doctors’ incidence of needle sticks and motor vehicle accidents increase after extended work hours.

Furthermore, we know that someone who is excessively tired cannot make good judgments, and lack of sleep has been likened in psychological studies to intoxication. Yes, pass offs are a high risk time, but two alert physicians can communicate clearly with one another. If I were a patient, I would always prefer a new physician who had slept well over an original one who was debilitated with fatigue.

Dr. Nasca highlights a resident who was put in the position to either leave her dying patient or stay and lie about the hours she had worked. From my experience, the lies have been in the other direction: One friend at a New York program told me that one resident schedule was created for public consumption (demonstrating that the residents were working within the work hour limitation guidelines) while the real schedule was followed.

Furthermore, Dr. Nasca reports that teaching hospitals have been shown to give better care than private hospitals, but that is in spite of the long resident hours, not because of them. I recall a surgical resident who told me that on his service, after being on call, the residents were rewarded by being allowed to operate the next day. Would you want your family member to be a reward for an exhausted doctor?

A surgical colleague told me of the time she left work after extended hours, was driving home during daylight and next found herself on the side of the freeway in the dark. Apparently, she had fallen asleep at the wheel, but not before she drove her car to a safer spot. Pretty creepy.

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Napping on the job?

The saga continues. Read this editorial on resident (and medical student) fatigue. I agree that mandating a nap is impossible to enforce. And can you imagine the chutzpah a resident would have to have to demand his/her nap in the current hierarchical medical training system?

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Medical Training: Long and Dangerous Hours

Check out this NYT’s article on residency training hours. What the author doesn’t mention is that – despite the mandatory maximum 80-hour work week – many residents are working more. The residents have no incentive to report this to the Residency Review Committee (RRC) because they don’t want to find themselves in unaccredited programs. The incentives are misaligned, leaving the residents without recourse.

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About Dr. Michelle Finkel

Dr. Michelle Finkel

Dr. Finkel is a graduate of Stanford University and Harvard Medical School. On completing her residency at Harvard, she was asked to
stay on as faculty at Harvard Medical School and spent five years teaching at the world-renowned Massachusetts General Hospital.
She was appointed to the Assistant Residency Director position for the Harvard Affiliated
Emergency Medicine Residency where she reviewed countless applications, personal statements and resumes. Read more

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