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FutureDoc?? said:How about it, residents?
How many hours per week do you usually work?
What specialty are you in?
What year resident are you?
toxic-megacolon said:Surgery (2 months): 50-75 hours/week
Blade28 said:Whoa, where is this? Those are amazing hours.
toxic-megacolon said:Most Rotations (7 Months): 10-30 hours/week
Danger Man said:You are going to be the reason that the RRC begins to have MINIMUM work hours!
toxic-megacolon said:As a transitional year, I did not have to take call like the prelims and categoricals did on my cardiac surgery rotation. Transitional year at this institution is a VACATION. 😛
Blade28 said:Transitional year? Thought you were in ER, switching to G Surg next year? 😕
Diane L. Evans said:The biggest problem most residency programs are facing is the 1 day off in 7 rule. For programs with night floats call is Sat all day or Fr/Sun (fri usual day work then on call 6pm to 8am sat and sun 8am to 6 pm). BUT WHEN YOU WORK F/SUN saturday IS NOT AN OFF DAY AND WHEN YOU WORK SAT sunday IS NOT AN OFF DAY. Because you need to wake up (if you're lucky enough to sleep) at home...
Wahoos said:Orthopedics Surgery Resident
PGY-1 / General Surgery Intern 😡
Academic Program in Northeast U.S.
My hours per week range from 80-100+.
We take in house call q3-4 depending on the month.
Sometimes, Call can be q2 if someone is out with vacation or sick.
My Vascular Surgery month was 100 hours x 4 weeks
By far the easiest month was Plastics Surgery when I averaged 75-85 hours per week.
Trauma month was 90 x 4 weeeks
Neurosurgery was 85-90 x 4 weeks
SICU was 85 x 4 weeks
Ortho months were good 80-90 or so x 4 weeks
I think the hours per week varies alot between the different programs, and also between the different levels of residents. (PGY-1 vs Chiefs)
Also the Call nights can vary very much between the different programs as well. You can take call and not get a single phone call after 10pm vs getting 20 consults overnight/called by the floor nurses every 15 minutes.
Overall, Surgery residents tend to be in the hospital more than medicine/peds/FP residents.
AJM said:Actually the ACGME rule is just a 24 hour period off -- if you have off from 8am sat to 8am sun, that counts as your day, even though you're not waking up at home.... 😎
avgjoe said:All right Blade and Wahoos .. as a future surg resident (hopefully 🙂) I"ve gotta ask.
Do you guys report your hours correctly? As in, 100+ during vascular, etc? What is the PDs' response? Why is it that you have to work that much - what else should they be doing to help you guys keep to the mandated 80?
Do you guys not mind the hours or what is it that really keeps you continuing to do that when you know it's illegal?
At this point I just don't understand it.. maybe I will next year?
WilcoWorld said:So, when I considered how much time is spent rounding, re-rounding, eating lunch, etc, I concluded that during a single shift in the ED I did about as much work as I did in a whole week on Obstetrics. For, during an ED shift I'm going non-stop for 10 hours straight.
CANES2006 said:Really?! I'm doing ER right now (yeah, I know I'm a 4th yr med student 🙄 ) and everyone seems to be sitting down and gossiping most of the time. The only time that they really seem busy is during a code, which hardly ever happens in our ER, since we have a Trauma Level 1 center where most codes go to. I'm usually in the corner studying WITH the interns/residents beside me. 😀 It was definitely non-stop on the Labor floor. I was lucky if I got to sit down for 5 minutes at a time. Guess every place is different. 🙂
DrQuinn said:A poster before said most EM programs are PGY2-4, which is wholly incorrect. The vast majority of programs are PGY 1-3.
I am current PGY-3, Chief Resident. In my EM months, I work ~170 hours a month (so that's 40-45 hours a week).
Q
No biggie. I'm a DO at an MD institution. True that ALL DO EM residencies (technically, OGME versus PGY) are 4 years... but MD programs are generally 3.SLUser11 said:I think alot of DOs do an intern year and then 3 for ER....this coming from my ONE experience with a DO ER resident....so take "alot" to really mean "this one guy I know."
CANES2006 said:Really?! I'm doing ER right now (yeah, I know I'm a 4th yr med student 🙄 ) and everyone seems to be sitting down and gossiping most of the time. The only time that they really seem busy is during a code, which hardly ever happens in our ER, since we have a Trauma Level 1 center where most codes go to. I'm usually in the corner studying WITH the interns/residents beside me. 😀 It was definitely non-stop on the Labor floor. I was lucky if I got to sit down for 5 minutes at a time. Guess every place is different. 🙂
WilcoWorld said:EM-1
I found that on Surgery I would have gone over 80 if I had acted as the surgical interns did. They seemed to be afraid of looking like they were not hard working if they requested their required days off, so they would go for two weeks without any days off & just suck it up.