0971 Methods and Schedule-Related Differences in a Multi-center Trial of Rapidly Cycling versus Extended Duration Work Rosters

  • Stone K
  • Landrigan C
  • Blackwell T
  • et al.
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
10Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Introduction: Extended duration work shifts in resident-physicians may impact safety and performance, but the relative benefits and harms of eliminating extended duration shifts is uncertain. Method(s): We conducted a multi-center, cluster-randomized crossover trial in pediatric Intensive Care Units (ICUs) at 6 academic medical centers to compare two schedules among residents: an extended duration work roster (EDWR) that included some shifts of 24 hours or longer, and a rapidly cycling work roster (RCWR) which eliminated longer shifts. Schedule order was randomly assigned. Patient safety outcomes were tracked by centrally trained physician observers and chart review, and were centrally adjudicated. Resident-related outcomes included sleep and work (based on diaries and actigraphy), alertness (psychomotor vigilance task), and questionnaire-based data on mood, health and resident experience. Patient census data and average number of resident-physicians present daily across the months of data collection at each site were used to assess workload, expressed as average number of ICU patients per resident-physician (IPRP). Result(s): A total of 210 and 203 resident rotations (residency program Years 2 and 3) were assigned to RCWR and EDWR, respectively. Compared to residents who refused participation (13 in RCWR; 6 in EDWR), those who participated were more likely to be in residency program Year 3 (p=.03); all other baseline characteristics including age, gender, race/ethnicity, and medical specialty were similar (p>.05). Overall baseline characteristics of both residents and patients were similar between the two schedules (p>.05 for all comparisons). An unanticipated significant difference in resident workload on the two schedules was observed, with mean IPRP of 8.52 on RCWR vs 6.86 on EDWR (p

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Stone, K. L., Landrigan, C. P., Blackwell, T., Rahman, S. A., Kriesel, D. R., Vittinghoff, E., … Czeisler, C. A. (2019). 0971 Methods and Schedule-Related Differences in a Multi-center Trial of Rapidly Cycling versus Extended Duration Work Rosters. Sleep, 42(Supplement_1), A391–A391. https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsz067.968

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free