TY - JOUR
T1 - Resident duty hour regulation and patient safety
T2 - Establishing a balance between concerns about resident fatigue and adequate training in neurosurgery - Special topic
AU - Grady, M. Sean
AU - Batjer, H. Hunt
AU - Dacey, Ralph G.
PY - 2009/5
Y1 - 2009/5
N2 - Postgraduate training in medicine has been under scrutiny over the past 10 years with a major focus on physician personal health and patient safety. The culmination of a series of events led to the 80-hour work week instituted by the Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education in 2003. The effect this mandate has had on surgical education, and specifically training in neurological surgery, has been incompletely evaluated. Nevertheless, external pressure has prompted the Institute of Medicine to issue a new report on resident work hours and patient safety. In this report, the authors focus on the unique aspects of neurosurgical training in which physicians are trained to safely and effectively carry out complex high-risk tasks, the experience from abroad where work hours are reduced to well below 80 hours/week, and the risk that further reduction in work hours poses to the public. The authors conclude that there must be an adequate balance between the risks associated with resident fatigue and those associated with an inexperienced neurosurgical work force for public health.
AB - Postgraduate training in medicine has been under scrutiny over the past 10 years with a major focus on physician personal health and patient safety. The culmination of a series of events led to the 80-hour work week instituted by the Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education in 2003. The effect this mandate has had on surgical education, and specifically training in neurological surgery, has been incompletely evaluated. Nevertheless, external pressure has prompted the Institute of Medicine to issue a new report on resident work hours and patient safety. In this report, the authors focus on the unique aspects of neurosurgical training in which physicians are trained to safely and effectively carry out complex high-risk tasks, the experience from abroad where work hours are reduced to well below 80 hours/week, and the risk that further reduction in work hours poses to the public. The authors conclude that there must be an adequate balance between the risks associated with resident fatigue and those associated with an inexperienced neurosurgical work force for public health.
KW - Duty hours
KW - Resident training
KW - Resident work week regulation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=66849115677&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3171/2009.2.JNS081583
DO - 10.3171/2009.2.JNS081583
M3 - Article
C2 - 19409029
AN - SCOPUS:66849115677
SN - 0022-3085
VL - 110
SP - 828
EP - 836
JO - Journal of neurosurgery
JF - Journal of neurosurgery
IS - 5
ER -