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You will see more answers in the clinical rotations thread. There is some variation with institution.
However, to answer your question:
1. Outpt Family Medicine and Peds- 7:45-5ish most days. Usually not later than 6.
2. Inpatient Med/Peds- very variable with call q4-5. Post-call, usually out by no later than 2. Some days 6-6. Others 6-3. Schedule not to exceed 80 hours/week.
3. EM- variable 8 hour shifts, some overnight 11-7a, some 3-11p, other 7-3p.
4. OB- one week of: nights (5p-7a), one week L&D (7a-5p), clinic (5:45-5), newborn 6-4.
5. Surgery- 6-6 most days (one weekend day)- schedule not to exceed 80 hours/week.
6 Psych- have not had this yet but I had heard it often is 8-4/5.
We only have one call night in surgery- trauma call- so as to not go over the work hours requirement.
I think this is a universal truth for ALL med students, at all rotation sites.The 80-hour workweek rules vary by med school. Some schools treat the med students like residents (so they shouldn't go over 80 hours a week, and they shouldn't work more than 30-hour shifts), and others don't hold their students to the same restrictions.
Basic rule of thumb at most schools (I think) is that outpatient services tend to be mostly 8-5, while things like inpatient medicine, surgery and OB tend to be much longer hours (6-6, 7-7 etc) and may include overnight calls and weekends. Everything else is somewhere in between.
The 80-hour workweek rules vary by med school. Some schools treat the med students like residents (so they shouldn't go over 80 hours a week, and they shouldn't work more than 30-hour shifts), and others don't hold their students to the same restrictions.
Ouch, that's harsh. Unless it's a rare case and you want to be there, that seems unnecessary to me. Let's see, what else can I learn from watching the 5th lap chole this week?They had a policy that residents couldn't scrub surgeries if they were post call, but medical students absolutely had to scrub surgeries and were often kept until 5 pm the next day.
Generally, long hours=you're getting to do a lot=fun rotations.
Generally, long hours=you're getting to do a lot=fun rotations.
I've actually seen an inverse relationship. The outpatient stuff at clinics which is more short staffed (and where the patients complain less if it's a med student taking care of them) is where you often get to do the most, and it tends to be very 8-5 ish. Longer hour things often involve a lot of standing and watching, or eternal rounding.
This was my biggest pet peeve on ophtho (which, as you know is 8-5, and almost entirely out-patient). this is probably a stupid question..but what do you guys DO in your rotations?? just basically shadow the doctors, observe, take notes, and try to learn as much as possible? what about all these on call nights, do you just get paged when the physician does?
I think this is the surgery/ob-gyn mentality.
I'm not knocking it - I have the exact same mentality! - but I know that for some people, the long hours erase any memory of anything "fun" that they got to do all day. ...
On call nights, you're supposed to get paged by the resident if something interesting comes in. I wouldn't count on this happening - at 3 am, most residents don't remember that a med student is on call with them.
hello,
as an m3 and m4, what are the hours for the rotations? are they crazy like in the residencies,or typical 9-5 40 hour weeks?
thanks
It depends on your school and where you choose your electives. My schedule has been less demanding than other schools.
OB was 545am-6pm M-F, with one weekend of the same
Surgery was 7am-5pm M-F, with one weekend
IM was M-F 7am-5pm M-F, with 2 weekends
Family Med was 8am-6pm M-F
Peds was 8am-5pm M-F
EM was 7am-7pm or 7pm-7am (20 shifts)
Psych was 7am-3pm M-F
I never had an "on-call night"
Wow- nice schedule in surgery and medicine!
I would suggest for those students whose schools do not adhere to a 80 hour work limitation for students to organize and make that rule applicable to students. We are paying for the priviledge of learning and working in the hospital, not to be slave labor. Working consistently > 80 hours is dangerous for us, the patients and the community. I would submit that it is probably as dangerous to drive home after working 36 hours straight as for those braintrusts who drive under the influence.
If your rotation does not adhere to the 80 hour work week, then simply inform them of the rule and only show up for 80 hours.
I did this and they complied.
There IS no 80 hour work week limitation requirement for med students. Doesn't exist. It only applies to residencies. Your school is extremely generous and not the norm. I think most folks on here had significantly longer hours in IM and surgery than you describe.
There IS no 80 hour work week limitation requirement for med students. Doesn't exist. It only applies to residencies. Your school is extremely generous and not the norm. I think most folks on here had significantly longer hours in IM and surgery than you describe.
If this is the case, it is because the students have not organized and made it so at these schools.
As I mentioned before, working > 80 hours per week is dangerous to the student, patient and community and should not be the "norm".
The 80 hour work limit requirement for residents was not passed by the schools individually. They are required to abide by it for residents, or can lose accredition. That some schools chose to enact it for med students, with or without organization, is up to the generosity of the schools. There is no LCME requirement covering med students. It has nothing to do with what med students have chosen to push for. The school could say no and be well within their rights regardless.
It depends on your school and where you choose your electives. My schedule has been less demanding than other schools.
OB was 545am-6pm M-F, with one weekend of the same
Surgery was 7am-5pm M-F, with one weekend
IM was M-F 7am-5pm M-F, with 2 weekends
Family Med was 8am-6pm M-F
Peds was 8am-5pm M-F
EM was 7am-7pm or 7pm-7am (20 shifts)
Psych was 7am-3pm M-F
I never had an "on-call night"
Wow. No call on surgery, and you started at 7??? 😱
Did you guys not pre-round or something? How do your residents and attendings grade you, then? And do you think that the somewhat easier rotation hours have affected what people from your school choose to specialize in?
I just can't get over that 7 AM start time...was it this way at ALL surgery rotation sites?
Surgery rotations can vary wildly - even in the same med school!
When I was an MS-III, it was well-known that the various hospitals had rotations of varying difficulty, expectations, hours, etc. Those interested in surgery (like yours truly) opted for the busiest hospital. Those who didn't care so much? Yeah, you got it.
So our experiences could vary from Q3 call, no post-call, preround by 6 am, etc., to M-F 8-4 without call.
We are graded on our attentiveness in surgery, since it is a surgery rotation (not a paperwork or rounding rotation) 😀

Wow. 8 to 4??
We have some "easier" surgery rotations at our school as well. Well, sort of easier - there's no call, and they start later than other rotation sites, but they're located down in Wilmington, DE. I'd rather NOT have to battle I-95 every day for six weeks - it was much, much easier for me to go to the University Hospital and pre-round at 5 AM every morning!
But do you think that those easy rotations gave some of your classmates the wrong idea about surgery? I have classmates who have said "I'd do surgery in a heartbeat if the hours weren't so bad." But if your rotation hours really weren't that bad - do you think that they erroneously thought "Hey, surgery is fun! I like being in the OR! This is great!"?
My residents would have to co-sign my notes - a lot of the residents here evalute you on the quality of your daily SOAP notes, as well as your willingness to write them. (One of my residents evaluated me based on the difficulty of the patients I was seeing in the morning! - i.e. were you seeing only floor patients, or did you venture into the SICU every now and then?)
One day, I saw my attending flipping through my progress notes as well...![]()
Such a sad part of medical school. 2 years of clinicals shouldn't come down to you knowing how to write a good SOAP note. A monkey can do this. You should focus your efforts on learning medicine and surgery instead....It's really sad how things go when residents want to scut you out...

Not all schools fall under control of the LCME...
Ok, my bad. So to rephrase, at US allo schools there is no requirement limiting med students to an 80 hour work week. The rule doesn't exist. It isn't something you can force your school to give you because it's not a requirement for accredition. The school is free to do whatever it wants on this, but there isn't any rule out there.
I didn't attend an allopathic school, so that may be perhaps why I was able to keep my work under 80 hours per week....
But do you think that those easy rotations gave some of your classmates the wrong idea about surgery? I have classmates who have said "I'd do surgery in a heartbeat if the hours weren't so bad."
If this is the case, it is because the students have not organized and made it so at these schools.
As I mentioned before, working > 80 hours per week is dangerous to the student, patient and community and should not be the "norm".
Such a sad part of medical school. 2 years of clinicals shouldn't come down to you knowing how to write a good SOAP note. A monkey can do this. You should focus your efforts on learning medicine and surgery instead....It's really sad how things go when residents want to scut you out...
Anyone rotate through neurosurgery?
I did a 2 week rotation in it. My hours were 7am-5pm. I worked with attendings only.
It wasn't scut - they had to write a note right after mine, so it didn't save them a lot of work or time. They used it as a way to see whether or not I knew what was going on. For instance - did I document a calcium level, and check for Chvostek's sign on a thyroidectomy patient? What kind of post-op plan did I write for the splenectomy patient (i.e. did I remember to comment on some kind of pneumococcal/neisseria meningitis/H. flu prophylaxis?), etc. Do you know what complications to look for?
I mean, I thought it was a fair way to assess students. I guess they could have asked me flat out, instead of reading my notes, but that probably would have delayed rounds...and NO one wants that...![]()
I did a 2 week rotation in it. My hours were 7am-5pm. I worked with attendings only.
Students should probably not have enough responsibility to make them truly dangerous to patients. The liability there would be astronomical for the hospital ("sorry we gave your grandmother a pneumo with that central line, the student was on his 85th hour").
I personally don't think that students should freak out about the 80 hour work week. Is it ideal to work more than 80? No. Have I done it? Yes. Do you get anywhere by complaining about it? No.
Plus students tend to use work-hour rules as a selective weapon. If you're doing a sub-i in your specialty of choice, are at 80 hours, and an attending says "hey do you want to help us do this procedure" are you going to say, "well I've already done my 80 hours so it would be dangerous to me and the community to stay."
It's more going to come into play when you feel sleighted and overworked and are looking for an excuse to leave.
I also had the valuable experience of seeing firsthand what it was like to be a surgery intern...which pretty much made me run screaming!