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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 4/2013

01-04-2013 | Letters

The Composition of Intern Work While on Call

Author: Eugene Z. Oddone, MD, MHSc

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 4/2013

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Excerpt

To the Editors:—Of the many wonderful scenes in “Out of Africa,” there is one that applies to Fletcher and colleagues’ article describing an intern’s day on call. During a deluge of heavy rain, Karen Blixen and her Maasai helper are trying to keep the coffee plants from being swept away by forming mud dams to hold the water back. He sees that it is hopeless, and tries to convince her that “…this water wants to live in Mombassa. Let it live in Mombassa.” So it is with medical internships. Not the hopeless part, just the fact that they are difficult to contain or change course. Twenty years ago, we conducted a random work sampling study in an attempt to more systematically document how housestaff spent their time on an inpatient rotation.1,2 We showed that on-call interns spent 11.5 % of their time with patients, roughly 44 % of their time on administrative work, 8 % of their time walking from one place to another, and 6 % of their time on learning activities. Twenty years later, after an extensive effort to change how housestaff are educated, Fletcher and colleagues found that on-call interns spend about 12 % of their time with patients, 40 % on administrative work (all of which is now on a computer), 5 % of their time walking around, and 2 % of their time on learning activities.3 Interestingly, interns 20 years ago slept about 4 h during a 24-h call cycle. In the current study, only half of the interns slept at all, and the average amount of sleep was only about 1.5 h. The majority of residency reform regulations have been directed at enhancing education and improving rest. They don’t seem to be working, assuming that we think they were broken in the first place. An internship is what it is, and it’s a beautiful thing. For me, now about 30 years later, my internship was without a doubt the most important year in my career. I wouldn’t change it one bit, and I wouldn’t trade it for any other year of my career. …
Literature
1.
go back to reference Oddone E, Guarisco S, Simel D. Comparison of housestaff’s estimates of their workday activities with results of a random work-sampling study. Acad Med. 1993;68:859–861.PubMedCrossRef Oddone E, Guarisco S, Simel D. Comparison of housestaff’s estimates of their workday activities with results of a random work-sampling study. Acad Med. 1993;68:859–861.PubMedCrossRef
2.
go back to reference Guarisco S, Oddone E, Simel D. Time analysis of a general medicine service: results from a random work sampling study. J Gen Intern Med. 1994;9:272–277.PubMedCrossRef Guarisco S, Oddone E, Simel D. Time analysis of a general medicine service: results from a random work sampling study. J Gen Intern Med. 1994;9:272–277.PubMedCrossRef
3.
go back to reference Fletcher KE, Visotcky AM, Slagle JM, et al. The composition of intern work on call. J Gen Intern Med. 2012;27:1432–7.PubMedCrossRef Fletcher KE, Visotcky AM, Slagle JM, et al. The composition of intern work on call. J Gen Intern Med. 2012;27:1432–7.PubMedCrossRef
Metadata
Title
The Composition of Intern Work While on Call
Author
Eugene Z. Oddone, MD, MHSc
Publication date
01-04-2013
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 4/2013
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-012-2317-9

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