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Titulo Artículo:
Residents' and attendings' perceptions of a night float system in an internal medicine program in Canada
Resumen:
Background: The Night Float system (NFS) is often used in residency training programs to meet work hour regulations. The purpose of this study was to examine resident and attendings' perceptions of the NFS on issues of resident learning, well-being, work, non-educational activities and the health care system (patient safety and quality of care, inter-professional teams, workload on attendings and costs of on-call coverage). Methods: A survey questionnaire with closed and open-ended questions (26 residents and eight attendings in an Internal Medicine program), informal discussions with the program and moonlighting and financial data were collected. Results and Discussion: The main findings included, (i) an overall congruency in opinions between resident and attendings across all mean comparisons, (ii) perceptions of improvement for most aspects of resident well-being (e.g. stress, fatigue) and work environment (e.g. supervision, support), (iii) a neutral effect on the resident learning environment, except resident opinions on an increase in opportunities for learning, (iv) perceptions of improved patient safety and quality of care despite worsened continuity of care, and (v) no increases in work-load on attendings or the health care system (cost-neutral call coverage). Patient safety, handovers and increased utilization of moonlighting opportunities need further exploration.
Fecha de publicación:
2015.
Autores :
Loni Desanghere;
Robert P Skomro;
Thomas W Wilson;
Anurag Saxena ;
Autor corporativo:
Education for Health,
Editores:
Medline-PubMed ;
Signatura Topográfica:
2
Idioma:
Inglés
Páginas:
118
ISBN:
1357-6283
Existencias:
123
Palabras claves:
Health care system
Residentes
Night float system,
Resident duty hours
Público objetivo:
Titulo Artículo:
Residents' and attendings' perceptions of a night float system in an internal medicine program in Canada
Resumen:
Background: The Night Float system (NFS) is often used in residency training programs to meet work hour regulations. The purpose of this study was to examine resident and attendings' perceptions of the NFS on issues of resident learning, well-being, work, non-educational activities and the health care system (patient safety and quality of care, inter-professional teams, workload on attendings and costs of on-call coverage). Methods: A survey questionnaire with closed and open-ended questions (26 residents and eight attendings in an Internal Medicine program), informal discussions with the program and moonlighting and financial data were collected. Results and Discussion: The main findings included, (i) an overall congruency in opinions between resident and attendings across all mean comparisons, (ii) perceptions of improvement for most aspects of resident well-being (e.g. stress, fatigue) and work environment (e.g. supervision, support), (iii) a neutral effect on the resident learning environment, except resident opinions on an increase in opportunities for learning, (iv) perceptions of improved patient safety and quality of care despite worsened continuity of care, and (v) no increases in work-load on attendings or the health care system (cost-neutral call coverage). Patient safety, handovers and increased utilization of moonlighting opportunities need further exploration.
Fecha de publicación:
2015.
Autores :
Loni Desanghere;
Robert P Skomro;
Thomas W Wilson;
Anurag Saxena ;
Autor corporativo:
Education for Health,
Editores:
Medline-PubMed ;
Signatura Topográfica:
2
Idioma:
Inglés
Páginas:
118
Existencias:
123
Palabras claves:
Health care system
Residentes
Night float system,
Resident duty hours
Público objetivo:
Titulo Artículo:
Residents' and attendings' perceptions of a night float system in an internal medicine program in Canada
Resumen:
Background: The Night Float system (NFS) is often used in residency training programs to meet work hour regulations. The purpose of this study was to examine resident and attendings' perceptions of the NFS on issues of resident learning, well-being, work, non-educational activities and the health care system (patient safety and quality of care, inter-professional teams, workload on attendings and costs of on-call coverage). Methods: A survey questionnaire with closed and open-ended questions (26 residents and eight attendings in an Internal Medicine program), informal discussions with the program and moonlighting and financial data were collected. Results and Discussion: The main findings included, (i) an overall congruency in opinions between resident and attendings across all mean comparisons, (ii) perceptions of improvement for most aspects of resident well-being (e.g. stress, fatigue) and work environment (e.g. supervision, support), (iii) a neutral effect on the resident learning environment, except resident opinions on an increase in opportunities for learning, (iv) perceptions of improved patient safety and quality of care despite worsened continuity of care, and (v) no increases in work-load on attendings or the health care system (cost-neutral call coverage). Patient safety, handovers and increased utilization of moonlighting opportunities need further exploration.
Autores:
Loni Desanghere
,
Robert P Skomro
,
Thomas W Wilson
,
Anurag Saxena
,
.
Titulo Revista:
Education for Health,
.
Numero:
2
Volumen:
28
Fecha de publicación:
2015.
Base de Datos Bibliográfica:
Medline-PubMed ,
.
Suplemento:
Idioma:
Inglés
Página Inicial:
118
Página Final:
123
ISBN:
1357-6283
Palabras claves:
Health care system
Residentes
Night float system,
Resident duty hours
Público objetivo:
Título Medline-PubMed :
Residents' and attendings' perceptions of a night float system in an internal medicine program in Canada
Resumen:
Background: The Night Float system (NFS) is often used in residency training programs to meet work hour regulations. The purpose of this study was to examine resident and attendings' perceptions of the NFS on issues of resident learning, well-being, work, non-educational activities and the health care system (patient safety and quality of care, inter-professional teams, workload on attendings and costs of on-call coverage). Methods: A survey questionnaire with closed and open-ended questions (26 residents and eight attendings in an Internal Medicine program), informal discussions with the program and moonlighting and financial data were collected. Results and Discussion: The main findings included, (i) an overall congruency in opinions between resident and attendings across all mean comparisons, (ii) perceptions of improvement for most aspects of resident well-being (e.g. stress, fatigue) and work environment (e.g. supervision, support), (iii) a neutral effect on the resident learning environment, except resident opinions on an increase in opportunities for learning, (iv) perceptions of improved patient safety and quality of care despite worsened continuity of care, and (v) no increases in work-load on attendings or the health care system (cost-neutral call coverage). Patient safety, handovers and increased utilization of moonlighting opportunities need further exploration.
Autores :
Loni Desanghere;
Robert P Skomro;
Thomas W Wilson;
Anurag Saxena ;
Autor corporativo:
Education for Health,
Fecha de publicación:
2015.
Tipo :
Medline-PubMed .
Idioma:
Inglés
Palabras claves:
Health care system
Residentes
Night float system,
Resident duty hours
Público objetivo:
Título Medline-PubMed :
Residents' and attendings' perceptions of a night float system in an internal medicine program in Canada
Resumen:
Background: The Night Float system (NFS) is often used in residency training programs to meet work hour regulations. The purpose of this study was to examine resident and attendings' perceptions of the NFS on issues of resident learning, well-being, work, non-educational activities and the health care system (patient safety and quality of care, inter-professional teams, workload on attendings and costs of on-call coverage). Methods: A survey questionnaire with closed and open-ended questions (26 residents and eight attendings in an Internal Medicine program), informal discussions with the program and moonlighting and financial data were collected. Results and Discussion: The main findings included, (i) an overall congruency in opinions between resident and attendings across all mean comparisons, (ii) perceptions of improvement for most aspects of resident well-being (e.g. stress, fatigue) and work environment (e.g. supervision, support), (iii) a neutral effect on the resident learning environment, except resident opinions on an increase in opportunities for learning, (iv) perceptions of improved patient safety and quality of care despite worsened continuity of care, and (v) no increases in work-load on attendings or the health care system (cost-neutral call coverage). Patient safety, handovers and increased utilization of moonlighting opportunities need further exploration.
Autores :
Loni Desanghere;
Robert P Skomro;
Thomas W Wilson;
Anurag Saxena ;
Autor corporativo:
Education for Health,
Fecha de publicación:
2015.
Paginas:
118.
ISBN:
1357-6283.
Idioma:
Inglés
Palabras claves:
Health care system
Residentes
Night float system,
Resident duty hours
Público objetivo:
Titulo Artículo:
Residents' and attendings' perceptions of a night float system in an internal medicine program in Canada
Resumen:
Background: The Night Float system (NFS) is often used in residency training programs to meet work hour regulations. The purpose of this study was to examine resident and attendings' perceptions of the NFS on issues of resident learning, well-being, work, non-educational activities and the health care system (patient safety and quality of care, inter-professional teams, workload on attendings and costs of on-call coverage). Methods: A survey questionnaire with closed and open-ended questions (26 residents and eight attendings in an Internal Medicine program), informal discussions with the program and moonlighting and financial data were collected. Results and Discussion: The main findings included, (i) an overall congruency in opinions between resident and attendings across all mean comparisons, (ii) perceptions of improvement for most aspects of resident well-being (e.g. stress, fatigue) and work environment (e.g. supervision, support), (iii) a neutral effect on the resident learning environment, except resident opinions on an increase in opportunities for learning, (iv) perceptions of improved patient safety and quality of care despite worsened continuity of care, and (v) no increases in work-load on attendings or the health care system (cost-neutral call coverage). Patient safety, handovers and increased utilization of moonlighting opportunities need further exploration.
Fecha de publicación:
2015.
Autor corporativo:
Education for Health,
.
Idioma:
Inglés
Palabras claves:
Health care system
Residentes
Night float system,
Resident duty hours
Público objetivo:
Citar
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Imprimir
Guardar
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Loni Desanghere Robert P Skomro Thomas W Wilson Anurag Saxena Loni Desanghere Robert P Skomro Thomas W Wilson Anurag Saxena Residents' and attendings' perceptions of a night float system in an internal medicine program in Canada. 2015; 28Ed. 118.