Sleep Loss and Performance of Anaesthesia Trainees and Specialists

Nov 14, 2008Chronobiology international

How Sleep Loss Affects the Performance of Anesthesia Trainees and Specialists

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Abstract

Post-duty performance for anaesthesia trainees and specialists is significantly affected by sleep loss and work schedules.

  • 11% of day shifts and 23% of night shifts for trainees involved more than 2 hours of acute sleep loss.
  • Specialists averaged 0.6 hours less sleep on day shifts and 0.8 hours less sleep on day+call schedules compared to days off.
  • Post-night shift performance was significantly worse than post-day shift performance, with median reaction times showing substantial delays.
  • Poorer post-duty performance correlated with greater acute sleep loss and longer time since waking.
  • For both trainees and specialists, performance varied consistently throughout the day, indicating a circadian influence.

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