Abstract

ABSTRACT Physicians often work long hours and on-call shifts, which may expose them to circadian misalignment and negative health outcomes. However, few studies have examined whether these working hour characteristics, ascertained using objective working hour records, are associated with the physicians’ risk of sickness absence. We investigated the associations of 14 characteristics of payroll-based working hours and on-call work with the risk of short sickness absence among hospital physicians. In this cohort study, 2845 physicians from six Finnish hospital districts were linked to electronic payroll-based records of daily working hours, on-call duty and short (1–3 days) sickness absence between 2005 and 2019. A case-crossover design was applied using conditional logistic regression with the 28 day case and control windows to estimate odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for short sickness absence. After controlling for weekly working hours and the number of normal (≤12 h) shifts, a higher number of long (>12 h) shifts (ORs for ≥5 versus none: 2.54, 95% CI 1.68–3.84), very long (>24 h) shifts (ORs for ≥5 versus none: 2.62, 95%CI 1.61–4.27), and on-call shifts (OR for ≥5 versus none: 2.15, 95% CI 1.44–3.21) and a higher number of short (<11 h) shift intervals (OR for ≥5 versus none: 12.61, 95% CI 8.88–17.90) were all associated with the increased risk of short sickness absence. These associations did not differ between male and female physicians or between age groups. To conclude, the findings from objective working hour records show that long work shifts, on-call shifts and short shift intervals are related to the risk of short (1–3 days) sickness absence among hospital physicians.

Highlights

  • Physician’s workload is high due to population ageing (Eurofound 2012), related increased need for care, eco­ nomic challenges and staff shortage (Smiley et al 2018)

  • The working hour characteristics and on-call shifts are described in Table 2 and they show no differences in means between exposure and control win­ dows except for the number of normal (

  • The shift length, number of long (>12 h) and very long (>24 h) shifts, number of on-call shifts, and number of short shift intervals were associated with increased odds of short sickness absence in dose-response manner, after controlling weekly working hours and the number of normal (≤12 h) shifts (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Physician’s workload is high due to population ageing (Eurofound 2012), related increased need for care, eco­ nomic challenges and staff shortage (Smiley et al 2018). An important societal question is what consequences such working hour related peaks at health care have in terms of increased sickness absence risk among physicians. On-call work is associated with a number of negative health outcomes, such as work stress, burnout, occupa­ tional accidents and sickness absence (Cottey et al 2020; Lindfors et al 2006; Mak et al 2019; Rosta and Gerber 2007). The mechanism underlying these associations include insufficient sleep and recovery and disrupted

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