DoctorB said:
I was wondering if someone could breakdown an average 30 hour shift for me in residency. I bet it is different depending on what residency program you are in and where you are doing it at but I would appreciate if you could list what type of residency program you are in and how the average day breaks down. Like, are you busy doing stuff for the first 4 hours, get a 4 hour break, etc??
Hi there,
The days differ for each specialty. For surgery, you are generally operating for the first 8 to 10 hours of your day and then doing floor care or clinic after that. If emergency patients come in through the ED, you would work them up, admit them or operate on them if an emergency. This can go on over the first 24 hours or you can have downtime and be napping in the call room. After the first 24 hours, you may not take on any new patients but finish up work on the ones that you have already admitted.
In medicine, you would typically round, write orders and attend conferences during the first 8 hours of your day. After that, you admit and work up patients that are admitted to your service through the ED. Again, through the night you may have patient after patient but that is rare. Usually, you admit a patient, work up and then back to the call room. After 24 hours, you may not admit any new patients but follow-up the ones that you have already admitted.
Some places have a cap on the number of admissions that may come to the teaching service after hours. Some places have more than one team on call after hours so that admissions are alternated.
As a surgery resident, I have had days where I never sat down or even visited the restroom but they are rare. Most of the time, I get the work done and wait for emergencies. Rarely, I have had nights where I slept all night and did not get a single call or just one or two.
Residency is a step up from medical school but it is by no mean torture day after day. The 80-hour work week has been good for some places and very bad for others. As you interview for residency slots, you have to evaluate how they manage night call. Some places have a night float systems; others do not. There are pros and cons to every system.
I have seen very physically disabled residents (wheelchair) get through residency in things like Family Practice, Psychiatry, Internal Medicine and Pediatrics. The surgical specialties are a bit more physically demanding in terms of longer hours of standing at the operating table. Again, during third-year, you will get a good idea of the hours as most OB and surgery clerkships require overnight call of their medical students.
njbmd
🙂