Title of article
Use of a personal digital assistant to monitor surgery student work and sleep hours
Author/Authors
Susan Steinemann، نويسنده , , Jill Omori، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
4
From page
272
To page
275
Abstract
Background
We developed a personal digital assistant (PDA)-based program to assess compliance with our medical student work hours policy, and to correlate work hours with sleep and performance.
Methods
Medical students on surgery clerkship logged real-time work and sleep hours for 1 week. Estimated work hours, clinical evaluations, and score on the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) surgery examination were recorded.
Results
Thirty-seven students logged work hours, which correlated poorly with estimated work hours and sleep hours. The majority of students overestimated work hours by a mean of 19.5 hours. Twenty-four students transgressed written policy. Increased in-hospital study hours correlated with improved clinical ratings but poorer NBME examination scores. Increased operating room hours correlated with higher NBME examination scores.
Conclusions
Medical students inaccurately estimate work hours; a PDA-based log facilitates hours monitoring. Unenforced work hour policies are frequently transgressed. Work activity patterns, but not total work hours, correlated with outcomes on standardized written tests and clinical ratings.
Keywords
Work hours , medical student
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Record number
618197
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