Objective Assessment of Fitness to Perform (FTOP) After Surgical Night Shifts in the Netherlands: An Observational Study Using the Validated FTOP Self-test in Daily Surgical Practice

BACKGROUND:Surgical skills and decision making are influenced by alertness, reaction time, eye-hand coordination, and concentration. Night shift might impair these functions but it is unclear to what extent. The aim of this study was to investigate whether a night shift routinely impairs the surgeon...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of surgery 2019-11, Vol.270 (5), p.930-936
Hauptverfasser: Tummers, Fokkedien H. M P, Huizinga, Coen R H, Stockmann, Hein B. A C, Hamming, Jaap F, Cohen, Adam F, van der Bogt, Koen E A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND:Surgical skills and decision making are influenced by alertness, reaction time, eye-hand coordination, and concentration. Night shift might impair these functions but it is unclear to what extent. The aim of this study was to investigate whether a night shift routinely impairs the surgeonʼs fitness to perform and whether this reaches a critical limit as compared to relevant frames of reference. METHODS:Consultants (n = 59) and residents (n = 103) conducted fitness to perform measurements at precall, postcall, and noncall moments. This validated self-test consists of an adaptive tracker that is able to objectively measure alertness, reaction time, concentration, and eye-hand coordination, and multiple visual analog scales to subjectively score alertness. Results are compared to sociolegal (ethanol) and professional (operative skills) frames of reference that refer to a decrease under the influence of 0.06% ethanol. RESULTS:Residents spent 1.7 call hours asleep on average as compared to 5.4 for consultants. Subjective alertness decreased in residents after night shifts (−13, P < 0.001) but not in consultants (−1.2, P = NS). The overnight difference in tracker score was −1.17 (P < 0.001) for residents and 0.46 (P = NS) for surgeons. Postcall subjective alertness only correlated to objective alertness in consultants. For residents, hours slept on-call correlated to objective alertness. For consultants, subsequent night calls significantly correlated to objective alertness, with the third subsequent call related to performance below the reference. CONCLUSIONS:Consultants remain fit to perform after night call, but subsequent calls may compromise clinical activities. This study provides insight and awareness of individual performance with clear frames of reference.
ISSN:0003-4932
1528-1140
DOI:10.1097/SLA.0000000000003517