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- Resident [Any Field]
So, can you tell me about stuff?
Given that there are over a thousand residency programs in the US, in many different specialties and geographic areas, perhaps you could make the task you've entrusted the SDN to do for you a tad easier by telling us what field you are applying to and where in the country you would like to be/need to be.
Thank you for the comments! I am interested in pursuing a nonsurgical specialty. I am still undecided, but most probably it will be internal medicine.
Hello everyone!
I don't see a recent thread on working hours during residency. Please share your experience on how you juggle long shifts and personal life. I'd like to find out which residency programs have relatively short working hours.
... By reputation psychiatry, PM&R, and emergency medicine may have shorter hours depending on the program. For most specialties you will still have to do a full intern year though (psych is more like 6 months medicine + neuro with the rest psych and pathology does not do a traditional intern year).
While the ROAD specialties are prolly accurate, the surgical specialties prolly work more than those numbers and neurosurg and ortho have extended caps to 88 hours/week. To make it worse, programs are allowed a 10% variation...so a neurosurg or ortho resident could work 95 hours a week and still be in compliance with the ACGME. Most surgery residents I have encountered at a number of institutitions have told me they are coerced to fabricate hours to be in compliance. With the widespread use of EMR, I am a bit surprised the ACGME doesn't just look up when orders were placed to determine how long a resident is actually in the hospital.
Actually the 10% exception IS the 88 hours (that is 10% beyond the usual 80); programs are not granted any extension beyond that by RRC/ACGME:
"Can duty hours for surgical chief residents be extended to 88 hours per week?"
Programs interested in extending the duty hours for their chief residents can use the 88- hour exception to request an increase of up to 10% in duty hours on a program-by- program basis, with endorsement of the sponsoring institutions graduate medical education committee (GMEC) and the approval of the Review Committee. If approved, the maximum duration of the approval may not exceed the length of time until the programs next site visit and review. A request for an exception must be based on a sound educational justification. Most Review Committees categorically do not permit programs to use the 10% exception. Neurological Surgery and Orthopaedic Surgery are the only Review Committees that allow exceptions.
I stand corrected. But I think we both know that all of that is BS anyway. So flagrant are the work hour violations that it must be that the ACGME simply looks the other way. I know about a dozen Neurosurg residents...not a single one of them works less than 88 hours a week. My ortho friends tell me they routinely work >100 hrs/wk on trauma. Gen Surg is the same...hardly any residents (not a single one that I know) are working less than 80 hrs/wk.
I stand corrected. But I think we both know that all of that is BS anyway. So flagrant are the work hour violations that it must be that the ACGME simply looks the other way....
With the widespread use of EMR, I am a bit surprised the ACGME doesn't just look up when orders were placed to determine how long a resident is actually in the hospital.
I have heard of an ortho program getting busted because the ACGME checked the parking cards of the residents to see when they went in and out of the parking garage.
That doesn't sound likely. Plus some residents just use a hospital lot as a spare covered parking spot and walk. The fact that my car hasn't moved in three months doesn't really mean I never left the building. There would have to be more evidence.
It seems to me that it would be quite obvious to tell the difference between a resident having his car in the parking garage for 744 hours straight versus the majority of residents in a program having logged 350-400+ hours with roughly 12-24 hour blocks in the garage over the course of a month.
It's maybe enough to be suspicious but still not solid enough evidence to make an accusation.
What if someone takes a 3 hour nap when they're post-call, so that they don't drive home while they're exhausted? Their timecard would look like they stayed and worked that whole time. I've heard this story too, but no one ever mentions where it happened.It seems to me that it would be quite obvious to tell the difference between a resident having his car in the parking garage for 744 hours straight versus the majority of residents in a program having logged 350-400+ hours with roughly 12-24 hour blocks in the garage over the course of a month.
What if someone takes a 3 hour nap when they're post-call, so that they don't drive home while they're exhausted? Their timecard would look like they stayed and worked that whole time. I've heard this story too, but no one ever mentions where it happened.
I think you can appreciate the difference between a few residents sporadically having aberrant hours 1 or 2 months out of the year from the majority of residents in a program going over hours the majority of months in a year.
How many times have you actually slept at the hospital post-call, instead of sleepily driving yourself home to your much more comfortable bed?
It takes me about as long to drive home as it does to walk to the call room.I think you can appreciate the difference between a few residents sporadically having aberrant hours 1 or 2 months out of the year from the majority of residents in a program going over hours the majority of months in a year.
How many times have you actually slept at the hospital post-call, instead of sleepily driving yourself home to your much more comfortable bed?
How many times have you actually slept at the hospital post-call, instead of sleepily driving yourself home to your much more comfortable bed?
The ACGME does not check parking time stamps. This is crazy talk.
Is is possible that a program might do so internally as a quick-and-easy-but-really-inaccurate-and-prone-to-errors way of doing it? Sure. With all the caveats in this thread.