Sleep and recovery in physicians on night call: a longitudinal field study

Aug 18, 2010BMC health services research

Sleep and Recovery in Doctors Working Night Shifts Over Time

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Abstract

Mean night sleep was 3 hours for physicians during night call.

  • Recovery patterns did not differ between anaesthesiologists and other physician specialists handling less critical conditions.
  • Physicians reported 7 hours of sleep on both nights after call and 6 hours following daytime work.
  • Mental fatigue and feelings of being well rested were lower immediately post-call but improved after two nights of sleep.
  • Despite significant sleep loss during night call, self-reported recovery was achieved after two nights' sleep.
  • The findings highlight potential long-term health concerns due to limited sleep duration in physicians.

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Key numbers

3 hours
Mean Night Sleep During Call
Average sleep duration for all physicians on night call
7 hours
Mean Night Sleep Post-Call
Average sleep duration for all physicians the first two nights post-call
6 hours
Mean Night Sleep After Daytime Work
Average sleep duration after daytime work for all physicians

Full Text

What this is

  • This study examines the impact of a 16-hour night-call schedule on sleep and recovery in physicians.
  • It compares anaesthesiologists with paediatricians and ENT surgeons, focusing on sleep duration and quality.
  • Findings indicate that despite significant sleep loss during night shifts, recovery is possible within two nights.

Essence

  • Anaesthesiologists and other physicians experience considerable sleep loss during night-call duties, but they report full recovery after two nights of sleep. The 16-hour night-call schedule allows for sufficient short-term recovery, although the overall limited sleep duration raises long-term health concerns.

Key takeaways

  • Physicians averaged 3 hours of sleep during night calls, compared to 7 hours post-call and 6 hours after daytime work. This significant sleep loss during night duty is concerning.
  • Recovery patterns did not differ between anaesthesiologists and other specialists, indicating that both groups experience similar recovery after night-call duties.
  • Despite adequate short-term recovery reported after two nights' sleep, the overall sleep duration remains a potential long-term health risk for physicians.

Caveats

  • The study's limited sample size may affect the generalizability of the findings. Additionally, individual workload variations were not precisely measured, which could influence sleep outcomes.

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