TY - JOUR
T1 - Work like a Doc
T2 - A comparison of regulations on residents' working hours in 14 high-income countries
AU - Maoz Breuer, Rina
AU - Waitzberg, Ruth
AU - Breuer, Adin
AU - Cram, Peter
AU - Bryndova, Lucie
AU - Williams, Gemma A.
AU - Kasekamp, Kaija
AU - Keskimaki, Ilmo
AU - Tynkkynen, Liina Kaisa
AU - van Ginneken, Verena
AU - Kovács, Eszter
AU - Burke, Sara
AU - McGlacken-Byrne, Domhnall
AU - Norton, Carol
AU - Whiston, Barbara
AU - Behmane, Daiga
AU - Grike, Ieva
AU - Batenburg, Ronald
AU - Albreh, Tit
AU - Pribakovic, Rade
AU - Bernal-Delgado, Enrique
AU - Estupiñan-Romero, Francisco
AU - Angulo-Pueyo, Ester
AU - Rose, Adam J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023
PY - 2023/4
Y1 - 2023/4
N2 - Background: Medical residents work long, continuous hours. Working in conditions of extreme fatigue has adverse effects on the quality and safety of care, and on residents' quality of life. Many countries have attempted to regulate residents’ work hours. Objectives: We aimed to review residents’ work hours regulations in different countries with an emphasis on night shifts. Methods: Standardized qualitative data on residents’ working hours were collected with the assistance of experts from 14 high-income countries through a questionnaire. An international comparative analysis was performed. Results: All countries reviewed limit the weekly working hours; North-American countries limit to 60–80 h, European countries limit to 48 h. In most countries, residents work 24 or 26 consecutive hours, but the number of long overnight shifts varies, ranging from two to ten. Many European countries face difficulties in complying with the weekly hour limit and allow opt-out contracts to exceed it. Conclusions: In the countries analyzed, residents still work long hours. Attempts to limit the shift length or the weekly working hours resulted in modest improvements in residents’ quality of life with mixed effects on quality of care and residents’ education.
AB - Background: Medical residents work long, continuous hours. Working in conditions of extreme fatigue has adverse effects on the quality and safety of care, and on residents' quality of life. Many countries have attempted to regulate residents’ work hours. Objectives: We aimed to review residents’ work hours regulations in different countries with an emphasis on night shifts. Methods: Standardized qualitative data on residents’ working hours were collected with the assistance of experts from 14 high-income countries through a questionnaire. An international comparative analysis was performed. Results: All countries reviewed limit the weekly working hours; North-American countries limit to 60–80 h, European countries limit to 48 h. In most countries, residents work 24 or 26 consecutive hours, but the number of long overnight shifts varies, ranging from two to ten. Many European countries face difficulties in complying with the weekly hour limit and allow opt-out contracts to exceed it. Conclusions: In the countries analyzed, residents still work long hours. Attempts to limit the shift length or the weekly working hours resulted in modest improvements in residents’ quality of life with mixed effects on quality of care and residents’ education.
KW - ACGME
KW - Cross-country analysis
KW - EWTD
KW - Medical residents
KW - Nightshifts
KW - Work hours
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U2 - 10.1016/j.healthpol.2023.104753
DO - 10.1016/j.healthpol.2023.104753
M3 - Review article
C2 - 36827717
AN - SCOPUS:85148541832
SN - 0168-8510
VL - 130
JO - Health policy
JF - Health policy
M1 - 104753
ER -