There are people in my program going over 80 hours weekly and have averaged over 80 in a month
I am at DO program and afraid to report them because I am applying to residency programs this upcoming year and other interns have similar issues.
I did mention it to them a few times with no response
Any one ever deal with anything like this and what is the best way to go about dealing with it
Thanks
1. First, it's very early in the year (only 6 weeks since July 1). Unfortunately, at this time "mentioning it to them a few times" probably wasn't the smartest thing to do in the real world. As an intern, you no longer have the "right to demand changes" that you had as a medical student (they're paying you, you're not paying them). It's too early to stir the waters (yeah, we all learn that the hard way) and you may come off as a complainer or a resident with a bad attitude. Not a good start. Be cautious, keep your head low. (On the other hand, it is probably acceptable to tell a sympathetic chief resident that you're exhausted and you believe you've been going over the hours. That's if you have a friendly chief, and you should assume for the time being that your chief really can't do much about it.)
2. Keep meticulous track of when you start work and when you leave. Don't just guesstimate, log it every day. Documentation of your hours is very important because they really, really need to be calculated according to the 80 hour work week rules. Oftentimes my colleagues and I noticed that "I went over 80 hours last week" but we fail to document this and we never actually do the calculation. You will be surprised at how many times you seem to go over your 80 hours, but after the calculation is done the program is still actually within the limits (remember it has to be averaged over a month, and then the month needs to be averaged among all residents over the course of the year).
3. At every residency I've ever seen, interns regularly notice they go over 80 hours/week during their first month of internship. Your work hours may drop as you climb up the learning curve, and it's possible that the next 10 months are so under 80 hours/week for the same rotations that when averaged out, they actually are compliant with the 80 hour week.
4. When your regulatory board does their annual survey (I'm assuming there is regularly some kind of survey, the ACGME has one), you can use this to state any real concerns about violations that you may have. This includes work hour violations. They remember these comments when they do a site visit for accreditation.
5. If by October or November these problems still exist, then I think it's fair to raise them as real concerns to be discussed at the program. At this point in time I think it's too early to tell whether your program is really "over hours" or not, because you and your fellow interns are all so new at the job that you're ridiculously slow compared to how you'll be in a few months.