Literature DB >> 21427046

Impact of reduction in working hours for doctors in training on postgraduate medical education and patients' outcomes: systematic review.

S R Moonesinghe1, J Lowery, N Shahi, A Millen, J D Beard.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether a reduction in working hours of doctors in postgraduate medical training has had an effect on objective measures of medical education and clinical outcome.
DESIGN: Systematic review. DATA SOURCES: Medline, Embase, ISI Web of Science, Google Scholar, ERIC, and SIGLE were searched without language restriction for articles published between 1990 and December 2010. Reference lists and citations of selected articles. STUDY SELECTION: Studies that assessed the impact of a change in duty hours using any objective measure of outcome related to postgraduate medical training, patient safety, or clinical outcome. Any study design was eligible for inclusion.
RESULTS: 72 studies were eligible for inclusion: 38 reporting training outcomes, 31 reporting outcomes in patients, and three reporting both. A reduction in working hours from greater than 80 hours a week (in accordance with US recommendations) does not seem to have adversely affected patient safety and has had limited effect on postgraduate training. Reports on the impact of European legislation limiting working hours to less than 56 or 48 a week are of poor quality and have conflicting results, meaning that firm conclusions cannot be made.
CONCLUSIONS: Reducing working hours to less than 80 a week has not adversely affected outcomes in patient or postgraduate training in the US. The impact of reducing hours to less than 56 or 48 a week in the UK has not yet been sufficiently evaluated in high quality studies. Further work is required, particularly in the European Union, using large multicentre evaluations of the impact of duty hours' legislation on objective educational and clinical outcomes.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21427046     DOI: 10.1136/bmj.d1580

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


  67 in total

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