Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Sawbones: The 80-Hour Work Week
Episode Date: April 24, 2017Just how long has the first-year doctor checking you out been awake? The answer may surprise you. The biggest surprise, however, is why a sleepy doctor may be better than the alternative. Music: "Medi...cines" by The Taxpayers
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Alright, time is about to books!
One, two, one, two, three, four! I'm your co-host Justin Tyler McElroy
And I'm Sydney tomorrow McElroy. That's good
It's not as much authority as I put behind it, but you'll get used to it
I never know when you're gonna throw that middle name curveball in there. Mm-hmm. So I'm not my name actually is curveball
My name is Justin curve ball McElroy curve ball is my middle name curve ball in there. So I'm not. My name actually is curve ball. My name is Justin curve ball.
Macroi curve ball is my middle name.
That'd be a great name for our next child.
If we have another child curve ball curve ball Macroi,
you heard it here first.
Curve ball will be the name.
No, that's not no.
So either we're late, by the way,
it can get a little much.
Sometimes I was traveling like all week. We were in an. Yeah, we're late, by the way, it can get a little much. Sometimes I was traveling
like all week. We were in an. Yeah, we went to a medical conference. No, not a heroin show.
A heroin prescription drug abuse in heroin summit. That's right. I didn't go to it. No,
I did. I did. I did. I went to the zoo with we went to the zoo with stuff you should know, his own chuck and
it was delightful. Yeah. We had a wonderful time there in Lina. But then Justin was gone
with work and we have a baby. Can we tough find a time? We just get really busy and we're
sorry, we're late. There's nothing compared to how it would have been if we had tried to
do a show while you were
still resident.
Yes.
Now, back in those days, there were no extra hours, there were no evenings or weekends or lunch
breaks or dinner breaks or breakfast breaks or showers or sleep sometimes. Or eating.
What did I do?
Did I pee?
Did I pee at all? There was some in those three years.
There was some peeing.
I remember you.
I remember coming home and you making me soup.
I did that a lot.
Yeah.
Before I passed out in bed eating soup.
I remember a couple times you look for, uh, we spent some time looking for other
things you could do with medical degree besides being a doctor.
I think there was a brief flirtation with
becoming a doctor lawyer.
Uh huh.
Yeah.
Yeah, anything to get me out of the hospital.
Now I understand you wanted to tell the folks
in the solbona's, listen to her family,
talk a little bit more about why that's like that.
Right, so we've,
I mean, actually we've had a lot of like tweets and Facebook posts and things
to mentioning that we should talk about residency work hours and duty hours. And Thomas sent
us an email about it. So he gets thanked for this. Thank you Thomas.
Thank you Thomas.
He's a decent email. And I'm thank you to everybody else who suggested it to us. It's just, it's
harder to search emails. Search. Yeah.
else who suggested it to, it's just, it's harder to search, emails, search. Yeah.
So it's interesting because I think that we are all familiar with the idea that people
in training to be a doctor work really long hours.
And then the question is always why and isn't that dangerous.
And then you see reports in the media about changes in work hours that are always kind of overly dramatic.
If you know the whole history and you live in that world, the reports can sound kind of silly sometimes.
But how did we end up here?
I don't know. It's a lot. It's staggering. I mean, it seems unreal.
Do you, I'm assuming you're going to talk about what it's like these days later, but do you want
to give a generally some people talk? No, it's not just about, you know, it's not a few hours more than a regular human
being worse. No, we're we're we're going to get to it, but in general, think about an 80-hour
work week as being fairly standard. Wow. Okay. So how did we how did we get here? How did we get
here? And let me be clear to I'm this evolution is slightly
different depending on where you live in the world. So this is mainly the US medical system.
This is this is how we do training here. I know the rules. I know that's been a hotly debated
topic in the UK, for instance, and oh, junior doctors have been protesting for their work
hours and rights and pay and all kinds of issues. I'm not covering that history because I'm
more familiar with the US system. So just to be clear, training physicians has always been a very intense process.
Historically, when you are a resident, meaning you're done with medical school, but you're not yet
out there on your own, so you're in that intern residency period. And a apprenticeship.
And apprenticeship of sorts.
Yes.
And think about it this way.
When you hear those words,
because a lot of people say,
what's the difference in intern or resident?
What do you mean?
Residency is somewhere between typically three and five years,
depending on what specialty you're in.
And whatever residency you're in,
the first year of it is
called your intern year. Okay. That's all it is. An intern is the first year resident after that you're
a resident. That's it. And historically, your training was 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
You were called a resident because you were a resident of the hospital.
Like you live there, right? Like you live there.
Like a hunchback of an older dog. You just sort of...
You just lived there.
Just lived there in the bals of the facility.
And the idea was that it was supposed to be this extremely intense,
immersive period of your life, very brief,
where you devoted your mind, body, and soul to learning medicine.
And then you would come out the other end
and be a physician and go out there
and do whatever you want to do on your own.
In general, in turn, so first year residents
were on call every other night.
Every other night, you stayed up all night long
and took care of all the patients.
And residents were on call every third.
So after your first year, you graduated to getting
to only be up all night every third night.
That are very, very other night.
You made very little money, like one doctor reference,
making $25 a month.
Wow.
When he was in residency.
And you did what we call the scut work in the hospital.
Now what we call scut work now,
and that term is pretty universal in medicine.
What we call...
I think it's universal.
Universal. Oh, is it? Yeah. Okay. Well, what we call... I can't see universal... Universal.
Oh, is it?
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, what we call scut work in the medical world now
is different from what scut work was back then.
So now when my residence can play about scut work,
we're talking about like all the paperwork we have to do,
like, vaccine and signing stuff
and sitting at a computer and endlessly doing notes
and, you know, and then people from documentation come
and tell you you need to clarify this further.
And that's the kind of stuff people think of as scut work.
What scut work was back in the day
was everything that happens to a patient in the hospital.
So imagine, and in modern hospitals,
this can seem odd for most people.
The doctor who actually sees you and admits you to the hospital
would also be the one who took your blood,
who started your IV, who took you to the X-ray suite
and performed your X-rays of themselves,
who administered your medications,
who then went and took your blood
that they've already drawn from you to the lab
and ran lab analyses and ran your analyses and transported've already drawn from you to the lab and ran lab analyses
and ran your analyses and transported you from room to room.
When you get moved from one room to the other, your doctor is the one actually wheeling
you from room to room.
Even like your EKG, your doctor might be the one running your EKG and also maybe he even
made those electrodes out of coins because I did read that report as well.
Making quarters were made silver back in the day,
making electrodes out of quarters
and running your own KG.
So, Scott work used to encompass all the stuff
that we now think of,
there are a lot of other health professionals
who work in the hospital that do that.
Doctors did all that too.
So you can imagine that during your call shift,
it was more than just making medical decisions,
you were non-stop busy.
Now, I wanted to make it in here. I did a quick Google search to back up my claim about
Scott, or being universal term. And Scott work actually does, day back to being medical jargon
from the 1960s. Scott was a sort of a derogatory way of referring to a junior intern called him a scut. Now that probably
goes back to an informal Irish slang that meant a person perceived as foolish, contemptible,
or objectionable. And that's what a scut was. That was adopted as medical jargon and scut
work in the 60s. I didn't know the history then. We still talk about scut was. That was adopted as medical jargon and scut work in the 60s.
I didn't know the history of that. We still talk about scut work up to this thing.
Scut is actually also the short tail of a deer or rabbit. So that could also be that.
So now we know that. So there you go. Thank you for that. Thank you.
For this week's segment of Justin Googled it. Justin Googled it.
this week's segment of Justin Google that. Justin Google that prior to the 1900s American medical graduates would often go abroad for clinical training. So you would finish your
med school and you might go to Europe to rotate through hospitals there because there was that
wasn't a really codified part of the American medical training yet. They brought back this idea though, and so we started creating internships
in the US in the early 1900s.
Now originally this was just a year.
So you finished medical school,
where you actually formally like set in classrooms
and learned about stuff.
You finished that, and you would spend a year
either rotating through various hospitals and specialties,
that would be called a rotating internship,
or you would do what they would call a straight internship,
meaning I already kind of know what I wanna do with my life,
so I'm gonna devote my entire intern year to that thing.
Right.
You would do this intern year,
and live exactly like I just described you,
that was where we get these terms,
residents come from, or house staff, or house officer,
I get that, I still hear that floated around today,
although we usually don't call them that anymore,
but you might be the house officer.
And because you live there,
you were the officer of the house.
You live there and you trained for a year.
And also, you should know,
a lot of the doctors at the time in the US
were young, unmarried men.
So they were supposed to have nothing else to do.
Yeah, it kind of seems to almost be self-selecting,
like you have to be of a certain,
also economic, like nobody financially dependent on you.
Right.
Obviously, and yeah, that would make sense
that those two would go hand in hand.
Yeah, it was recommended, I think,
Osler actually recommended two doctors,
like just don't bother getting married.
This is your life, this is your love,
this is your passion, don't bother with marriage,
or if you do, it better be somebody pretty understanding.
And luckily for you, it was.
It's not that bad.
A cool customer.
Not that bad now.
Just hardest big is all outdoors, say.
Well, that's fair.
After 1930, the internship year began to grow into what we think
of as the residency.
And a lot of this happened as things became more specialized.
And as we see that, and we see specialty boards arising,
we see the need for longer training
and more intense specialty-specific training.
If we're going to do all these surgeries now,
we actually need you to spend several years
doing the surgeries, not just one year sort of doing them
and then go off on your own and do them.
And then what also changed is that the hospitals
that these interns and residents would work in
would kind of become associated with that.
So this is a hospital that accepts residents
and so they are focused
on education and training and research. So a lot of the patients who went there would
be subjects and their research. But they also would provide care. They considered themselves
like charitable organizations. We provide care for people who maybe couldn't get it otherwise.
So they were serving people while expanding our medical knowledge base was kind of the
idea. It makes sense.
Now, after World War II, as medicine becomes even more specialized in technology advances,
and again, we need doctors to do these longer residencies.
We start seeing an expanded number of hospitals offer residencies and take residents, because
it wasn't, you know, there was this moment in
history where you didn't have to do a residency to be a doctor. You could just finish medical school
and, you know, go hang up your shingle and start seeing patients. You could do that still, right?
Used to be a GP. You still, yes, you still have to do an intern year and that's
that's kind of falling by the wayside.
But there was a moment where you could like,
even just go apprentice with somebody unofficially
just for your own learning and then go be a doctor.
Well, at this point, we kind of see everybody saying,
like, no, we probably need everybody to do a residency.
This is important.
We're gonna go ahead and recommend that you have
to have a residency to be a doctor,
at least a year of internship,
and if not a formal residency.
And what also helps with this are the Medicaid and Medicare acts in 1965.
So what this did is Medicare started giving money to hospitals to train residents.
Now hospitals are incentivized to take residents.
And this is when you see it really explodes.
So the fact that they're getting a lot of
cheap labor.
Well, that's the other thing.
Patient care starts to become more and more reliant
on having a bunch of cheap residents
staying up all night doing all the work in your hospital.
You know, it occurs to me that it's almost,
there's almost a parallel you could draw
between like language immersion.
You can take classes and classes and classes,
but really, the way you finally become fluent really
is you have to live in the place
where the language is being used constantly.
It seems like that,
so it's kind of necessary to like live in medicine
as much studying as you do.
It doesn't really click for you until you get that.
Is that how it how it felt for you?
I think that's very true because you know, you can't predict when you actually go
out there and start practicing, you can't predict what like disease states or
conditions you're going to care for first or the most often or you know,
when the first kind of unusual case is going to come
through your door. And so the more exposure you have to everything in training, the better
prepared you're going to be on the other side. And so, you know, I could read about a rare
disease a thousand times, but until I actually have that encounter and manage somebody with
it, I'm not going to be as good, I'm not going
to be as skilled. Was there any kind of consistency between these? Anybody sort of like making
sure that they all were consistent among the programs? Not initially. The AMA in 1910 kind
of unofficially started listing like who was a residency and who wasn't. It wasn't until the 1950s where we see these committees for
the various residency programs start to emerge for different specialties that actually started
to regulate these programs. And then in the 1970s, we see the liaison committee for
graduate medical education is formed, which transforms into the ACGME,
which is the governing body over residency and fellowship training.
Fellowship is beyond residency.
I didn't really talk about that, but everybody has to do a residency.
After you're done with your residency, if you want to specialize further, you may do a fellowship,
depending on what you're doing.
I didn't, for instance.
But that's in the 80s.
And then this ACGME is still
what governs all the residency programs today and make all the rules for us. And a credit
programs and come in, you know, survey and analyze programs periodically to make sure they're
doing what they're supposed to be doing.
Do you know how stringent those rules go? Like are there things like requirements on beds
or things like that? Like things that need to be on hand for people doing this.
Oh, they're incredibly strange.
Everything, yeah, no, that.
So you mean like for the residents to sleep in,
but yeah, oh, yeah, sleeping spaces and appropriate,
like there has to be food available to the residents 24 hours
and there's all kinds of rules to make sure
that residents are being supervised,
they're being cared for, they're being,
you're their concerns are being met, you know,
I mean, yes, they're very strict, very, very strict.
In the 1970s, people started to wonder
about the effects of working really long hours
on patient safety, as well as the idea
that these residents who are working really long hours,
what's the effect on their health and their mental health.
As well, yeah.
And you've got those, there's knives, you know, scalpals against your skulls.
Yeah, might as well check out on the MC of the room.
Right. So some studies started to suggest that maybe we need to have a balance between your working
pursuits, your educational pursuits, and your personal pursuits.
Maybe that was important.
Yeah, can you even fathom it?
And so in the early 1980s, the ACGME took the step of attempting to institutionalize this
by adding specific statements in the program requirements for graduate medical education
and pediatrics and internal medicine.
So in those two specialties, in their program requirements,
they said, listen, there needs to be a balance, but that was kind of it.
There should be a balance.
You figure out what it is,
but you should have a balance.
I'm going to find balance, but.
But there was no definition of that.
So throughout the 80s,
we see this move where medical schools are more focused
on research and less on teaching.
So supervision in the hospital is suffering because they don't want faculty in the hospital
supervising residents.
They want them in the lab making research money for the hospital.
And the hospitals are just focused on profits.
And so they're like, admit the patient, discharge the patient, get them in and out faster,
get the beds.
I mean, that's how they make the most money.
And resident training really suffered because they're not being supervised closely enough. And they're being put under
these incredible demands by the hospital to be more efficient, work harder and faster with
no sleep. Now, we already know that sleep deprivation is bad, right? We have lots of studies that
show that night shift workers and people who are chronically deprived of adequate sleep
because of their jobs or whatever are subject to increase adverse health events and negative impacts on their
quality of life.
Things like divorce rates are higher among people who don't have normal sleep hours and
that kind of thing.
We also know that like you're working memory is bad when you're sleep deprived.
So it makes sense when you put all that together. And you're in this atmosphere
where we see hospitals,
moving patients in and out quickly
and they're all staffed by all these really exhausted residents
and we're starting to get all these studies
on like, but sleep deprivation is so terrible.
And what are we doing with these residents?
And there's no real rules.
And what is this gonna do to patient safety?
And it was in this atmosphere
that a landmark case unfortunately happened that kind of brought it to national
attention. What happened in 1984, the Libby Zion case is
really what made this whole thing explode. There was an 18 year
old woman who was admitted to a New York teaching hospital. And
she was on a medication and then was given another medication,
and it resulted in a drug interaction, serotonin syndrome, and
the patient ended up dying.
And there was a big court case that followed.
It was very publicized.
And the end result is that the main factor they felt that contributed to the or decision
making was resident fatigue.
She was managed by two residents who were on like a 36-hour shift
and caring for 40 patients at a time.
They were not adequately supervised.
I would actually add that to the case.
But either way, the big issue that came out of the whole thing was,
how can you have somebody who hasn't slept in 36 hours taking care of
a human being and make good decisions?
I still don't have an answer to this question, Sydney.
And I, I, I'll regale with an anecdote to illustrate from your personal, uh, history, uh, about
that.
But are you going to answer the question first?
I wasn't going to answer it quite yet.
What we got to do.
We got to go to the billing department.
Let's go.
One time when Sydney had finished with a shift,
her sister, my sister, La Riley was in a theater camp that was performing a show that they
had written.
And she was like eight.
Oh, here's very little.
And so a bunch of eight year olds wrote the show.
You need to know that.
Yeah, a bunch of eight year olds wrote the show, okay?
The adorable.
The adorable.
The adorable.
By eight year olds.
But also hard, maybe a little hard to follow.
Little bit. And also hard, maybe a little hard to follow. Little bit.
And also I was sleep depressed.
And also I look over at the end of the show and I'm kind of like, that was very cute.
I don't understand any of what happened.
Sydney sobbing.
Sobing.
Sobing.
And how beautiful the theater that she just witnessed was because she had come directly
from the hospital after one of these. It's probably a 30-hour shift. Well, I think I was on surgery at the time, so maybe longer.
Sydney, how did this start to change and how much has it changed and why hasn't it changed more?
I'll get to that. So the ACGME task force on resident hours in Supervision was created,
and in February of 1988, they came out with some guidelines. They hear with the original guidelines.
First, you have to have one day off in seven on average,
on average, over a month, one in seven days.
Okay.
Second, you can't be on call more than every third night.
No more every other night, now it's every third night.
Third, you have to have adequate backup available,
just in case, let's say, because a resident
has a particularly arduous shift and they just can't make it to the end.
You got to have somebody who can step in and take over if that resident basically tags
out.
Right.
I can.
I give.
I got to go.
I don't know what's happening.
And fourth, there has to be appropriate supervision of all residents with like an open line
of communication between the resident and their supervising attending
at all times.
Right, we still get calls, even the city is not a resident
anymore when she's attending who's covering the service
at that point.
You still get calls at all hours.
Exactly.
No, I'm not complaining.
It's important.
No, it's not.
I'm complaining a little bit because I mean, I didn't sign
up for this life.
It's not fair.
You did when you married me. Yeah, fair enough. mean, I didn't sign up for this life. It's not fair.
You did when you married me.
Yeah, fair enough.
Okay.
Agreed.
It was left up to the individual specialties to regulate hours any further than that.
Those were the original only rules.
And this is the 80s.
Like this is like 88 and they've just now made any rules at all.
Up until then there were zero rules on how much you could work.
So they said basically like and then we'll leave it up to all
you different medical specialties to decide what's best for years. One 89 internal medicine specialty
created the concept of the 80 hour work week. And basically within a year, all the other specialties
said, you know what, that sounds like a good idea. Why don't we all adopt it too? So if their own free will,
everybody decided that 80 hours was enough, averaged over four weeks,
80 hours was enough for people to work.
Okay.
I always throw in that averaged over four weeks
because it gives you some wiggle room.
Cause you could work just kick out
a little bit early the next week.
Exactly.
So it gives you wiggle room.
It's the same with the one down.
And the 80 hours is like in context of what we're talking about here,
80 hours were seen as a mercy, right?
Like 80 hours is like,
well, I guess if we have to limit it to 80 hours, we will.
No, that,
very much was.
And like the physicians,
some of the older physicians that I trained under
would say things like that,
roll their eyes about 80 hours.
Like you guys think that's so long,
like that was nothing back in the day
I remember one one physician looking at me and saying you know how the residents were debating who was on call the next night
And they couldn't remember the schedule and and he said you know how I remembered what night I was on call
Because if I wasn't on call last night. I was on call tonight
Throughout the 90s there were several highly publicized cases of medical errors.
You really see this focus in the US where the media really hones in on the idea that, I
think, maybe people are making mistakes in hospitals.
This is the first time that this is, I mean, we know that this happens now.
This isn't news now, but this was.
And there were several really highly publicized cases of things like wrong site surgery, meaning like
cutting off the wrong limb kind of errors, major errors. There was a prominent reporter who
was given an overdose of a chemo drug. There were all kinds of medication errors. And this brought
the argument over physician duty hours back to the forefront again and said like 80 hours a week
you limited it to that and you think that's enough.
And then on top of that in 1999,
the Institute of Medicine issued this report called
to air is human building a safer health system.
And in it, they said, you know what,
there are probably somewhere between 48,000 and 98,000 deaths
from medical errors in the US each year.
And without really a great causes to why,
just that this is happening,
and you put this on top of people already being aware
of all these long hours residence work
and they're in training.
And so you get this public demand,
you somebody's got to do something.
Listen, we don't understand this system,
but we know it's bad.
But we know it's bad and we want somebody to fix it.
And actually, Congress even threatened, listen, ACGME, either regulate yourself, or we're
going to come do it for you.
So at this point, a work group is formed.
And by 2003, it takes a while.
Research takes a while.
By 2003, a set of common standards refining hours officially across all specialties was put
in place.
And this really didn't change a whole lot of what I've already mentioned.
It just made it.
Like all of these different specialties is kind of voluntarily said they would do this.
Well, the ACGME is now putting this in like any kind of last holdouts.
Can't anymore.
Right. They just codified.
Got in the outliers.
But this wasn't really enough because it was a focus of legislative attention
and money and people were starting to put in
more research dollars into effect,
like is there an effect on patient care?
Can we prove that fatigue actually, you know,
does impact patient safety?
Because we still haven't proven this.
At this point, we have no study that says it yet.
That's the problem.
We have no study that proves that.. That's the problem. Right. No study that proves that
So again the institute of medicine put together an expert group and said we need to come up with some stricter standards And they did a ton of homework
They had an international symposium and they got like 140 medical organizations involved
They got legal reviews educational literature reviews. They did all kinds of interviews with doctors patients
Families of patients who they felt had been injured due
to these errors from fatigued residents, sleep specialists, safety advisors, quality improvement
specialists.
They stuck with the 80 hour work week at the end of it all.
In the end, in the end, all the things that they came out with, they stuck with the 80 hour
work week, still averaged over four weeks.
They added though that when you're in your intern year,
when you're in your first year of residency,
you can only do 16 hours of continuous duty.
Now, this is after you, right?
This is after me.
This is not in 2003.
This was a take on the grip.
Yeah, 2005.
No, because you were in you...
2008. We got married in 2006. 2008. 2008 is when this happened.
So in 2008, they said PGY ones postgraduate year one, meaning first year residents can only
do 16 hours of continuous duty. This was a big shift. We were allowed to do 24 hours of continuous
duty with four extra hours as needed for like finishing things up.
So like I could spend 28 hours.
Hey, hey y'all, we know what that means.
Okay, you can't say like the limit, listen, hard limit, 24.
But if you're in the middle of some things,
you can go to 28.
Like it was really, it was honestly 30.
Like that was, that was what we all expected.
We expected that for me, pretty much through my residency,
every fourth night I spent a 30 hour shift in the hospital.
And that was, when I was on hospital service, you know,
when I did outpatient stuff, it wasn't like that.
But that was expected, that was pretty standard.
So anyway, they said as an intern, you can only do 16 hours
of shift, everybody else can still do 24
with the four extra bonus hours as needed.
But you have to have 10 hours off between shifts. That was new. And also, there's a lot
about strategic napping. Strategic napping, like polyphase at sleep, basically.
No, just like if you're going to do these overnight shifts, you need to take strategic
naps.
Yeah, I don't think they're having to ask anybody to take strategic maps, right?
Like, I think if you can get a map in there, you're going to get one, right?
It's part of fatigue mitigation training. We all have to go through fatigue mitigation training
for the RN residency and part of it is strategic mapping. I just really always like that term,
strategic mapping. Yeah. They didn't change the Q3 meaning every third night call. They didn't
change the one in seven days off. They did increase supervision of interns.
It really, to tell it like this impacted our program
so much that we had to completely rework
how we do our hospital service.
We had to completely start from the ground up
and reorganize how we do it in order to keep,
for an intern to keep a senior resident in house
with them 24 hours a day, completely
restructured our hospital service.
And we're at we're a busy service.
And so it that these were major changes for programs.
This doesn't sound like a major change, but it really is.
Because it's all math, right?
It's it's all excellent for people covers how many hours and how long can a lot of with
or by this person and you know, that 16 hour shift the problem with that
Because you have to understand that 16 hour shift for interns
It sounds like nothing. This was a huge deal if you're a residency program director
Because the concern is if you are in the hospital for 16 hours
You will see the beginning of a patient's
hospital for 16 hours, you will see the beginning of a patient's progress, and then you will leave and hand them off to someone else and go sleep or whatever. And you won't see the
initial, like all the stuff that goes into managing that acute phase of illness. And so there's
real concern that this will impact education. And then the other thing is, it sounds like this should be better naturally for patient safety,
but the other real concern is what happens in that transition from doctor to doctor.
That's a key moment in patient care.
And that transition is really dangerous.
Yeah, continuity of care is best and that transition is really dangerous.
But everybody's really tired.
And so they thought this will fix the tired and surely everything will get better
So 2008 these are put in place it made my senior year of residency just just a mess
Yeah, I'm kidding it wasn't that bad. It did it did require that I did a whole lot more work my third year of residency than I was
Antisputing but the results
after making these changes and about five years later they started looking
at everything.
Results were not very impressive.
Oh, no.
Studies of patient morbidity and mortality after the duty hours change really didn't
show much change.
Overall, there were isolated studies that thought they indicated some improvements here and
there, but when you look at them all over,
you know, all the overall impact, there just wasn't a big major change. Why? Well, there are a lot of reasons. First of all, it's self-report. So we're basing how many hours
of resident works on how many hours they're reporting that they worked. Right. Now, here's the problem
with that. If I'm a resident and I start reporting that I am routinely working past the duty hours,
I am working beyond what I am, you know, supposed to work that the ACGME dictates.
I cannot work more than this and I'm doing it anyway.
Those hours get reported and the ACGME monitors it.
And if that's happening over and over again in a residency program, that residency program
will not get accredited again.
They'll get shut down eventually.
You cannot abuse residents that way
and continue to operate.
Well, but if I'm a resident and my program gets shut down,
I'm kind of up the creek without a paddle, right?
Then you got to try to find another program to get into.
And that can be very difficult,
especially depending on what specialty you're in.
So there's a lot of pressure on the residents that may be not report
how many hours they're really working. So one question we've asked is, are people really
did this change much? I mean, did this actually change much? Because we don't know these,
what are the actual versus the reported hours? Another thing is that there is no protection if you are
whistleblower, like, it doesn't help you again. If your residency gets shut down, that hurts you. And then
also, there are a lot of confounding variables because in this same period of time, we see
like electronic medical records growing as a new thing. And so, like, there's a lot of
other things that we're improving and changing in hospitals. It's hard to say. So conclusively, up to this point,
we still have not seen any evidence
that resident fatigue actually does lead
to increase patient morbidity and mortality.
You can counterintuitive, but I guess a certain,
in a sense, like if you, you can only get so wet, right?
Like we like to say, like if you're pretty tired after a 16 hour shift, you can only get so wet, right? Like we like to say, like, if you're pretty tired
after a 16 hour shift, you're going to be pretty tired after a 24. I mean, it's like,
I don't know that you're so much more tired or so much less tired.
Well, it's hard to say. I mean, you think, and that's a, that's the tricky thing about
science. Sometimes stuff that you seem, you think, like, well, obviously the answer to
this, my hypothesis is that if you stay up 24 hours and take care of people that you're
going to make a lot of stupid decisions and you're going to hurt people, that seems like
a really natural assumption. But until you prove it, you know, that's the thing about science,
you got to prove it. You can't just guess it. We can't just imagine that that sounds
like that's probably it. We don't make stuff up. We test and prove.
We haven't tested this improvement.
Now, I think it is very fair to say reduced work hours
would probably lead to a lot better quality
of life for the residents.
So I think that most residents would say that,
well, heck yeah, if I could have another day off
a little more time at home with my family,
a little more sleep, time to pee.
Yeah, of course my quality of life would be better.
But then what are we?
You got to balance the whole thing. What are you going to sacrifice for that patient safety?
Are you going to sacrifice their maturation as residents? You know, their ability to achieve
the level of training they need to. Why? They acknowledge they need to before they leave.
I just, I think the continuity of care thing is a valid, I think that's a valid argument.
And of course, I'm coming to this as a layman,
but not layman.
That makes me sound like a superhero whose power
is not understanding the thing he's talking about.
I'm coming as a layman.
I understand that.
I do not, I cannot see how an extra day off,
extra day off would not affect continuity of care.
There really has been concern from faculty
at residency training programs that this shift
in in work hours impacted how quickly they watched their residences and turns grow and
learn and become just like you said, you've got to immerse yourself in this world to really
perform in it. The concern is that this does not provide that immersive experience for interns, so they
don't really get that till their second year and it puts them a year behind.
And what they're starting to see is that the interns become sort of removed from the
medical team.
The interns begin to develop a shift work mentality, which you cannot have in medicine.
You can't think of it as your shift.
And then when your shift is over, you clock out and take off.
You have to think of it, and I do, and this is important.
These are my patients.
They're my patients.
And even when I'm asleep, I'm responsible for them.
And there was a lot of concern that there was actually like a big push, well, we should
apply the 16 hour rule to all residents, not just interns, but all years of residency should only work a 16 hour shift.
And they found that their feeling was that this was incompatible with the actual practice of
medicine and surgery to work a 16 hour shift and that it was disruptive to professional
altruism, meaning that if this is all you do, you're never going to be able to develop that natural inclination to put a patient's needs before your own, which
is for our profession that sometimes we sacrifice what we want to need for somebody else, often
in our professional life.
As I think it sucks that the first year is not the worst. Because I think that that was an important
psychic thing for you to come to grips with your first year like, well, this is as hard
as it possibly gets. So after this, it will be easier. I think it's a bad mental thing
to say like actually the second year is hard is longer and harder, but then, you know,
I think that's a hard, mental, hard one.
It's tricky. I don't know. A lot of the residents I work with now say they would rather do the 24-hour
shift than the 16-hour shift. Really? And a lot of programs had to go to a night float system
in order to accommodate the 16-hour shifts, meaning that you just come in in the evening, work
overnight, go home in the morning morning and do that for a month.
And that universally is just, well, I should say universally, it's just like
overall, people do not prefer it. And we see more negative impact on that quality of life and sleep in a night shift
because it runs contrary to your circadian rhythms all the time.
So it sounds like no easy answers.
There isn't an easy answer.
And there's one more change starting July 1st, the old is new again. We, the duty
hour section on the ACGME, which by the way has become common program requirements, the learning
and working environment. We don't talk about duty hours anymore. The 16 hour shift has been
removed. We're going back to 24 for everybody. So just as soon as we changed it, we changed
it right back for all these reasons that I talked about, basically hospitals and programs and directors
residents themselves kind of went wild over this
and said, we don't want it.
Now, of course there was a pushback
and there were some like, there are no unions
or whether, no, there are few unions among residents.
Generally, we're not forbidden from unionizing,
but we don't fall under any OSHA protections,
because we're governed by the ACGME privately, basically.
You don't get, well, you don't have to be in a union
that they have OSHA protection.
No, but we also don't get OSHA protection, I mean.
Also, sign it, also.
Yeah, and it's hard for us to unionize.
There are some resident unions, not very many,
and they've pushed back against this change.
They feel like that for resident quality of life it's more important. We need to go
to the 16 hour shifts and to move in that direction. But it's very complex and there are a lot of people
with a lot of different interests involved. I mean at the end of the day patient care has to come
first. Of course we also have to be concerned about resident quality of life and obviously we need
to train our residents.
They have to leave residency able to do the things
they're going to do.
So like, think about it.
If you're a surgeon, how many gallbladder
do you have to remove before you can go remove
a gallbladder by yourself?
Seven.
Oh, sorry.
You didn't know.
Where did you come up with that?
Yes, just the number I picked when you started the sentence.
I was leaning to it.
But the thing is, if your work hours are shorter,
you're gonna remove less gallbladders.
And at some point, you're not gonna have removed enough
to go out there in the world and remove them on your own.
And that's the concern, is that we're gonna have
to extend residency even longer than it already is.
Or get worse gallbladders,
if everybody just missed their gallbladders of worse.
Oh, we can get more in that 16 hours.
Now, it's very hard and having lived it, I don't want to get the mentality, which you will see. And it's probably not just in medicine, but definitely medicine of why I did it.
So you can too. That's a terrible attitude to have.
And there's a lot that makes residents feel like they don't have any control of their life.
I mean, even the match process, which we didn't even talk about.
Right. You don't get to choose where you go for residency. I mean, even the match process, which we didn't even talk about. Right.
You don't get to choose where you go for residency.
I mean, you do sort of, you put it on a list
and you submit it to an algorithm
which then matches you with residency programs
that made lists of who they wanted.
And then at the end of the day,
you get a letter that tells you where you're going.
Yeah.
Which makes you feel completely out of control of your life.
And then you go somewhere where you're working
these crazy long hours and you're asking to do,
you're being asked to do these very intense, you know, scary things that matter immensely to, you know,
everybody. And it's a very scary time in your life, but it also has, it has to be intense
to some degree. It has to be. I think supervision is the key. I think support
is the key. I think that constantly, I think residents do need to tell the truth. If they're
being abused by the programs, if they're working over the work hour limits, they need to be
able to tell the truth and feel safe doing that and feel that the ACGME will come help and
not necessarily shut down, which is their job. And I'm not saying they won't, it's just that's
the fear. But it's a balancing act.
Sydney, thank you for this illuminating look into
and honestly, some flashbacks on my part of a very difficult
period in our lives, but.
I just tell the residents all the time, it's only temporary.
It's only temporary and you can do it.
And it's not. And it's not.
Once you kind of accept that that it's temporary and that what you're doing is going to make you a good
physician and that what you're doing is to take care of people. I don't know, it's not so bad.
I enjoyed it overall. I enjoyed my residency.
I want to make a quick note of something. We are going to be appearing this week at April 27th at the Columbus Podcast Festival,
saw bones, still buffering, and quarter pointed, the order is actually still buffering, quarter
pointed saw bones.
I believe they're at 8, 9, and 10.
As a Columbus Podcast Festival, if you and tickets are very affordable. I believe they're at eight, nine, 10. As a Columbus podcast festival, if you and tickets
are very affordable, I think they're two nights,
I think it's $10 for one night, $20 for both.
It is very affordable and it's gonna be a great night
of podcasting, great two nights.
So if you want details, search Columbus podcast festival
and come on, see us.
It'd be fun.
Please do.
It'd be fun.
I want to say thank you to Max one of the fun network for having us as a part of their
extended podcasting family.
There's tons of great shows on the network.
You should go and find yours this week.
I'm going to recommend Beef and Dairy Network, which is a podcast about beef, dairy, and news in that
industry. And it is fascinating. And hilarious. But you got to listen.
I can't help.
Let's go listen. Um, thanks to taxpayers for letting us use their song Medicines is the
intro and outro of our program. And thank you to everyone for listening. We appreciate
you. Yes. Thank you. Thank you. And that's
going to do it for us folks. So until next week, my name is Justin McRoy. I'm
Sydney McRoy. I always don't drill a hole in your head.
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