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Sleep and Exercise in Emergency Medicine Residents: An Observational Pilot Study Exploring the Utility of Wearable Activity Monitors for Monitoring Wellness

Introduction Burnout is well-documented in residents and emergency physicians. Wellness initiatives are becoming increasingly prevalent, but there is a lack of data supporting their efficacy. In some populations, a relationship between sleep, exercise, and wellness has been documented; however, this...

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Autores principales: Poonja, Zafrina, O'Brien, Preston, Cross, Elfriede, Bryce, Rhonda, Dance, Erica, Jaggi, Priya, Krentz, Joel, Thoma, Brent
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6141139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30237937
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.2973
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author Poonja, Zafrina
O'Brien, Preston
Cross, Elfriede
Bryce, Rhonda
Dance, Erica
Jaggi, Priya
Krentz, Joel
Thoma, Brent
author_facet Poonja, Zafrina
O'Brien, Preston
Cross, Elfriede
Bryce, Rhonda
Dance, Erica
Jaggi, Priya
Krentz, Joel
Thoma, Brent
author_sort Poonja, Zafrina
collection PubMed
description Introduction Burnout is well-documented in residents and emergency physicians. Wellness initiatives are becoming increasingly prevalent, but there is a lack of data supporting their efficacy. In some populations, a relationship between sleep, exercise, and wellness has been documented; however, this relationship has not been established in emergency medicine (EM) residents or physicians. We aim to determine whether a wearable activity monitor is a feasible method of evaluating exercise and sleep quality and quantity in emergency medicine residents and if these assessments are associated with greater perceived wellness. Methods Twenty EM residents from two training sites wore a wearable activity monitor (Fitbit ChargeTM, Fitbit, Inc., San Francisco, CA, USA) during a four-week EM rotation. The Fitbit recorded data on sleep quantity (minutes sleeping) and quality (sleep disruptions), as well as exercise quantity and quality (daily step count, daily active minutes performing activity of 3 - 6, and > 6 metabolic equivalents). Participants completed an end-of-rotation Perceived Wellness Survey (PWS), which provided information on six domains of personal wellness (psychological, emotional, social, physical, spiritual, and intellectual). PWS levels were compared between groups of subjects with higher or lower levels of activity and sleep (i.e., above and below the median subject-averaged values) using the Mann-Whitney U test. Other subject characteristics were similarly assessed for their association with PWS. When a possible confounding effect was seen, the data was stratified and reviewed using a scatterplot. Results Of the 28 eligible residents, 23 agreed to participate. Of these, 20 and 16 wore the device for at least 50% of the respective days and nights during the observation period. Two devices were lost. One PWS was not completed. There was no statistically significant correlation between resident perceived wellness survey scores, sleep interruptions, average daily sleep minutes, daily step count, or average daily active minutes for the sample overall. However, first-year residents and residents from years two to five reported different median PWS scores of 13.9 and 17.1, respectively. Further exploration by the training group suggested that step counts may correlate with wellness in participants in their first year of residency, while the quantity of sleep may have an association with wellness in participants in years two through five of their residency. Conclusion Using wearable activity monitor devices to capture sleep and exercise data among residents does not seem to be an effective approach. Our data does not support our hypothesis that overall resident wellness was associated with exercise and sleep quality and quantity as measured by such a device. These results are counterintuitive and may be complicated by several measurement-related limitations and the possibility that benefits depend on the stage of training.
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spelling pubmed-61411392018-09-20 Sleep and Exercise in Emergency Medicine Residents: An Observational Pilot Study Exploring the Utility of Wearable Activity Monitors for Monitoring Wellness Poonja, Zafrina O'Brien, Preston Cross, Elfriede Bryce, Rhonda Dance, Erica Jaggi, Priya Krentz, Joel Thoma, Brent Cureus Emergency Medicine Introduction Burnout is well-documented in residents and emergency physicians. Wellness initiatives are becoming increasingly prevalent, but there is a lack of data supporting their efficacy. In some populations, a relationship between sleep, exercise, and wellness has been documented; however, this relationship has not been established in emergency medicine (EM) residents or physicians. We aim to determine whether a wearable activity monitor is a feasible method of evaluating exercise and sleep quality and quantity in emergency medicine residents and if these assessments are associated with greater perceived wellness. Methods Twenty EM residents from two training sites wore a wearable activity monitor (Fitbit ChargeTM, Fitbit, Inc., San Francisco, CA, USA) during a four-week EM rotation. The Fitbit recorded data on sleep quantity (minutes sleeping) and quality (sleep disruptions), as well as exercise quantity and quality (daily step count, daily active minutes performing activity of 3 - 6, and > 6 metabolic equivalents). Participants completed an end-of-rotation Perceived Wellness Survey (PWS), which provided information on six domains of personal wellness (psychological, emotional, social, physical, spiritual, and intellectual). PWS levels were compared between groups of subjects with higher or lower levels of activity and sleep (i.e., above and below the median subject-averaged values) using the Mann-Whitney U test. Other subject characteristics were similarly assessed for their association with PWS. When a possible confounding effect was seen, the data was stratified and reviewed using a scatterplot. Results Of the 28 eligible residents, 23 agreed to participate. Of these, 20 and 16 wore the device for at least 50% of the respective days and nights during the observation period. Two devices were lost. One PWS was not completed. There was no statistically significant correlation between resident perceived wellness survey scores, sleep interruptions, average daily sleep minutes, daily step count, or average daily active minutes for the sample overall. However, first-year residents and residents from years two to five reported different median PWS scores of 13.9 and 17.1, respectively. Further exploration by the training group suggested that step counts may correlate with wellness in participants in their first year of residency, while the quantity of sleep may have an association with wellness in participants in years two through five of their residency. Conclusion Using wearable activity monitor devices to capture sleep and exercise data among residents does not seem to be an effective approach. Our data does not support our hypothesis that overall resident wellness was associated with exercise and sleep quality and quantity as measured by such a device. These results are counterintuitive and may be complicated by several measurement-related limitations and the possibility that benefits depend on the stage of training. Cureus 2018-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6141139/ /pubmed/30237937 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.2973 Text en Copyright © 2018, Poonja et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Poonja, Zafrina
O'Brien, Preston
Cross, Elfriede
Bryce, Rhonda
Dance, Erica
Jaggi, Priya
Krentz, Joel
Thoma, Brent
Sleep and Exercise in Emergency Medicine Residents: An Observational Pilot Study Exploring the Utility of Wearable Activity Monitors for Monitoring Wellness
title Sleep and Exercise in Emergency Medicine Residents: An Observational Pilot Study Exploring the Utility of Wearable Activity Monitors for Monitoring Wellness
title_full Sleep and Exercise in Emergency Medicine Residents: An Observational Pilot Study Exploring the Utility of Wearable Activity Monitors for Monitoring Wellness
title_fullStr Sleep and Exercise in Emergency Medicine Residents: An Observational Pilot Study Exploring the Utility of Wearable Activity Monitors for Monitoring Wellness
title_full_unstemmed Sleep and Exercise in Emergency Medicine Residents: An Observational Pilot Study Exploring the Utility of Wearable Activity Monitors for Monitoring Wellness
title_short Sleep and Exercise in Emergency Medicine Residents: An Observational Pilot Study Exploring the Utility of Wearable Activity Monitors for Monitoring Wellness
title_sort sleep and exercise in emergency medicine residents: an observational pilot study exploring the utility of wearable activity monitors for monitoring wellness
topic Emergency Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6141139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30237937
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.2973
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