在每周80小时工作制下,24小时随叫随到和急性疲劳不再影响居民的情绪

Michael Kiernan MD , Joseph Civetta MD , Christine Bartus MD , Stephen Walsh SCD
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引用次数: 37

摘要

目的:对值班住院医生的研究表明,疲劳会使他们的情绪恶化,使用情绪状态谱(POMS)测量抑郁、焦虑、困惑和愤怒的分数会增加。在之前的睡眠剥夺研究中,情绪比认知或运动表现更容易受到影响。本研究的目的是检验每周工作80小时的规定对居民情绪的影响,以及在电话后时期(PC)。方法经机构审查委员会批准,对住院医师进行调查并公布调查结果。POMS是一份65项的形容词问卷,包括测量紧张-焦虑、愤怒-敌意、抑郁-沮丧、活力-活动、疲劳-惯性和困惑-困惑的子量表,这些量表的总和形成一个总的情绪障碍得分。外科住院医生在上午9点的教学课程中接受测试(上午9点被证明与表现最低点相关)。居民们在夜间下班(NOC)或PC之后接受了测试。研究人员还收集了受试者24小时内的睡眠时间和其他人口统计数据。急性疲劳(AF)定义为睡眠<4小时。采用双样本t检验和线性回归评估组间差异。结果对PGY-1 ~ PGY-5水平的51名外科住院医师、35名男性和16名女性进行了4次共123份标准化POMS情绪问卷调查。总体而言,PC后进行了33次(27%)测试,NOC后进行了90次(73%)测试。急性疲劳居民的平均睡眠时间为2.2(+/ - 1.5)小时,而休息(R)居民的平均睡眠时间为6.7(+/ - 2.2)小时(无论是PC还是NOC)。在活力、愤怒、抑郁、注意力集中、疲劳、紧张或总分的平均值方面,PC和NOC之间、AF和R之间均无统计学差异。急性睡眠剥夺与总情绪障碍(无论是PC还是NOC)之间无显著关系。NOC总分与睡眠时间呈线性关系,r2 = 0.01 (p = 0.44), PC总分与睡眠时间呈线性关系,r2 = 0.07 (p = 0.14)。结论虽然有4次POMS,但只有27%是PC,这反映了我们1 / 4晚的住院覆盖率。与早期的研究相反,由POMS测量的住院患者情绪不再与PC/NOC或急性疲劳有关。先前的研究表明,睡眠不足与情绪下降有关。本研究中缺乏这种关系可能与新法规有关。人们一直认为,人们可以适应长期睡眠不足,但很难应对急性睡眠不足的影响。然而,如果新的规定缓解了慢性睡眠不足,那么一个休息良好的居民就可以定期应对急性睡眠不足的影响。也许通过消除长期的睡眠债,工作时间限制似乎已经消除了上一个时代个人电脑的负面影响。进一步的研究应该增加住院医师的研究数量,在相同的受试者中进行大量重复的NOC和PC配对,比较不同的服务,不同的工作量,初级和高级住院医师,以及室内和家庭呼叫时间表。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
24 Hours On-Call and Acute Fatigue No Longer Worsen Resident Mood Under the 80-Hour Work Week Regulations

Purpose

Studies in on-call residents have shown that mood is worsened by fatigue as indicated by increased scores on measures of depression, anxiety, confusion, and anger using the Profile of Mood States (POMS). In prior sleep deprivation studies, mood has been shown to be more affected than either cognitive or motor performances. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of the 80-hour work week regulations on resident mood in general and in a post-call period (PC).

Methods

Institutional Review Board approval was obtained to survey the residents and publish the results. POMS is a 65-item adjective questionnaire that includes subscales for measuring tension-anxiety, anger-hostility, depression-dejection, vigor-activity, fatigue-inertia, and confusion-bewilderment, with the summation of the scales forming a total mood disturbance score. Surgical residents were tested at a 9 am didactic curriculum session (9 am has been shown to correlate with the nadir of performance). Residents were tested after nights off call (NOC) or after PC. Time asleep in the preceding 24 hours and other demographic data were also collected. Acute fatigue (AF) was defined as <4 hours sleep. The two-sample t-test and linear regression were used to assess differences between groups.

Results

A total of 123 standardized POMS mood questionnaires were administered on 4 occasions to 51 surgical residents, 35 men and 16 women at levels PGY-1 through PGY-5. Overall, 33 tests (27%) were taken after PC and 90 (73%) were taken after NOC. Acute fatigue residents had a mean sleep time of 2.2 (+/−1.5) hours, whereas rested (R) residents had a mean sleep time of 6.7 (+/−2.2) hours (whether PC or NOC). No statistical differences in mean values of vigor, anger, depression, concentration, fatigue, tension, or total score were observed between PC and NOC or between AF and R residents. There was no significant relationship between acute sleep deprivation and total mood disturbance, whether PC or NOC. In linear relationships, NOC total score and hours slept had r2 = 0.01 (p = 0.44), whereas PC total score and hours slept had r2 = 0.07 (p = 0.14).

Conclusion

Although POMS was given 4 times, only 27% were PC, which reflects our 1 in 4 night in-house coverage. In contrast to earlier studies, resident mood, as measured by POMS, is no longer related to PC/NOC or acute fatigue. Previous studies have shown that loss of sleep was associated with declining mood. The lack of such a relationship in this study may be related to the new regulations. It has been assumed that people can adapt to chronic sleep loss but have a harder time coping with the effects of acute sleep deprivation. If, however, the new regulations have relieved chronic sleep deprivation, then a well-rested resident can periodically cope with the effects of acute sleep deprivation. Perhaps by eliminating chronic sleep debt, work hour restrictions seem to have removed the negative impact of PC seen in the prior era. Further studies should increase the number of residents studied, have numerous repeat NOC and PC pairs in same subjects, compare different services with different workloads, junior and senior residents, and in-house and at-home call schedules.

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