Effect of the 16-Hour Work Limit on General Surgery Intern Operative Case Volume: A Multi-institutional Study

IMPORTANCE The 80-hour work-week limit for all residents was instituted in 2003 and studies looking at its effect have been mixed. Since the advent of the 16-hour mandate for postgraduate year 1 residents in July 2011, no data have been published regarding the effect of this additional work-hour res...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA surgery 2013-09, Vol.148 (9), p.829-833
Hauptverfasser: Schwartz, Samuel I, Galante, Joseph, Kaji, Amy, Dolich, Matthew, Easter, David, Melcher, Marc L, Patel, Kevin, Reeves, Mark E, Salim, Ali, Senagore, Anthony J, Takanishi, Danny M, de Virgilio, Christian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IMPORTANCE The 80-hour work-week limit for all residents was instituted in 2003 and studies looking at its effect have been mixed. Since the advent of the 16-hour mandate for postgraduate year 1 residents in July 2011, no data have been published regarding the effect of this additional work-hour restriction. OBJECTIVE To determine whether the 16-hour intern work limit, implemented in July 2011, has adversely affected operative experience. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A retrospective review of categorical postgraduate year 1 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education case logs from the intern class (N = 52) (with 16-hour work limit) compared with the 4 preceding years (2007-2010; N = 197) (without 16-hour work limit). A total of 249 categorical general surgery interns from 10 general surgery residency programs in the western United States were included. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Total, major, first-assistant, and defined-category case totals. RESULTS As compared with the preceding 4 years, the 2011-2012 interns recorded a 25.8% decrease in total operative cases (65.9 vs 88.8, P = .005), a 31.8% decrease in major cases (54.9 vs 80.5, P 
ISSN:2168-6254
2168-6262
DOI:10.1001/jamasurg.2013.2677