Abstract

BackgroundThe impact of resident work hours on resident well-being and patient safety has long been a controversial issue.ObjectivesWhat has not been considered in resident work hour limitations is whether resident commuting time has any impact on a resident's total work hours or well-being.MethodsA self-administered electronic survey was distributed to emergency medicine residents in 2016.ResultsThe survey response was 8% (569/6828). Commuter time was 30 minutes or less in 70%. Two residents reported a commuter time of 76 to 90 minutes and one resident had a commuter time of 91 to 105 minutes. None reported commuter times greater than 105 minutes. Of most concern was that 29.3% of the residents reported falling asleep while driving their car home from work. We found 12% of respondents reporting being involved in a car collision while commuting. For residents with commute times greater than one hour, 66% reported they had fallen asleep while driving. When asked their opinion on the effect of commute time, those with commute times greater than one hour (75% of residents) responded that it was detrimental.ConclusionsWhile the majority of emergency medicine residents in this survey have commuter times of 30 minutes or less, there is a small population of residents with commuter times of 76 to 105 minutes. At times, residents whose commute is up to 105 minutes each way could be traveling a total of more than 3.5 hours for each round trip. Given that these residents often work 12-hour shifts, these extended commuter times may be having detrimental effects on their health and well-being.

Highlights

  • The impact of work hours on resident well-being and patient safety have long been a controversial issue

  • We found 12% of respondents reporting being involved in a car collision while commuting

  • While the majority of emergency medicine residents in this survey have commuter times of 30 minutes or less, there is a small population of residents with commuter times of 76 to 105 minutes

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Summary

Introduction

The impact of work hours on resident well-being and patient safety have long been a controversial issue. In 2003, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) instituted the common duty hour standards, which included an 80-hour workweek averaged over four weeks and an adequate rest period, which was defined as 10 hours of rest per duty period. For emergency medicine, this was further defined such that residents may work no more than 12 continuous hours with an equivalent amount of time off between scheduled work periods. The impact of resident work hours on resident well-being and patient safety has long been a controversial issue

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