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Adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations

BACKGROUND: New scheduling models were needed to adjust to residents’ duty hour reforms while maintaining safe patient care. In interdisciplinary night-float rotations, four to six residents from most residency programs collaborated for after-hours cross-coverage of most adult hospitalised patients...

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Autores principales: Lafleur, Alexandre, Harvey, Adrien, Simard, Caroline
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Canadian Medical Education Journal 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6260506/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30498549
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author Lafleur, Alexandre
Harvey, Adrien
Simard, Caroline
author_facet Lafleur, Alexandre
Harvey, Adrien
Simard, Caroline
author_sort Lafleur, Alexandre
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: New scheduling models were needed to adjust to residents’ duty hour reforms while maintaining safe patient care. In interdisciplinary night-float rotations, four to six residents from most residency programs collaborated for after-hours cross-coverage of most adult hospitalised patients as part of a Faculty-led rotation. Residents worked sixteen 12-hour night shifts over a month. METHODS: We measured residents’ perception of the patient safety climate during implementation of night-float rotations in five tertiary hospitals. We surveyed 267 residents who had completed the rotation in 2015-2016 with an online version of the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire. First year residents came from most residency programs, second- and third-year residents came from internal medicine. RESULTS: One-hundred-and-thirty residents completed the questionnaire. Scores did not differ across hospitals and residents’ years of training for all six safety-related climate factors: teamwork climate, job satisfaction, perceptions of management, safety climate, working conditions, and stress recognition. CONCLUSION: Simultaneous implementation in five hospitals of a Faculty-led interdisciplinary night-float rotation for most junior residents proved to be logistically feasible and showed similar and reassuring patient safety climate scores.
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spelling pubmed-62605062018-11-29 Adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations Lafleur, Alexandre Harvey, Adrien Simard, Caroline Can Med Educ J Brief Reports BACKGROUND: New scheduling models were needed to adjust to residents’ duty hour reforms while maintaining safe patient care. In interdisciplinary night-float rotations, four to six residents from most residency programs collaborated for after-hours cross-coverage of most adult hospitalised patients as part of a Faculty-led rotation. Residents worked sixteen 12-hour night shifts over a month. METHODS: We measured residents’ perception of the patient safety climate during implementation of night-float rotations in five tertiary hospitals. We surveyed 267 residents who had completed the rotation in 2015-2016 with an online version of the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire. First year residents came from most residency programs, second- and third-year residents came from internal medicine. RESULTS: One-hundred-and-thirty residents completed the questionnaire. Scores did not differ across hospitals and residents’ years of training for all six safety-related climate factors: teamwork climate, job satisfaction, perceptions of management, safety climate, working conditions, and stress recognition. CONCLUSION: Simultaneous implementation in five hospitals of a Faculty-led interdisciplinary night-float rotation for most junior residents proved to be logistically feasible and showed similar and reassuring patient safety climate scores. Canadian Medical Education Journal 2018-11-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6260506/ /pubmed/30498549 Text en © 2018 Lafleur, Harvey, Simard; licensee Synergies Partners http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Journal Systems article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Brief Reports
Lafleur, Alexandre
Harvey, Adrien
Simard, Caroline
Adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations
title Adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations
title_full Adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations
title_fullStr Adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations
title_full_unstemmed Adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations
title_short Adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations
title_sort adjusting to duty hour reforms: residents’ perception of the safety climate in interdisciplinary night-float rotations
topic Brief Reports
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6260506/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30498549
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