Working hours, on-call shifts, and risk of occupational injuries among hospital physicians: A case-crossover study

Mar 17, 2022Journal of occupational health

Hospital doctors’ work hours and on-call shifts linked to risk of workplace injuries

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Abstract

A higher number of long work shifts is associated with an increased risk of occupational injuries among hospital physicians.

  • Having three to four long shifts (>12 h) in the prior week is linked to a higher probability of injury (odds ratio 2.14).
  • The likelihood of injury increases significantly with three to four on-call shifts (odds ratio 3.54) compared to having none.
  • There is a dose-response relationship where more consecutive working days correlate with a higher probability of injury.
  • Increasing weekly working hours shows a slight increase in the likelihood of injury (odds ratio 1.03).
  • Conversely, a higher number of normal shifts (≤12 h) is associated with a reduced likelihood of injury (odds ratio 0.79).

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Key numbers

2.14
Increase in Injury Likelihood from Long Shifts
Odds ratio for three to four long (>12 h) work shifts
3.54
Increase in Injury Likelihood from On-Call Shifts
Odds ratio for three to four on-call shifts
1.03
Weekly Working Hours Impact
Odds ratio for weekly working hours

Full Text

What this is

  • This study investigates the link between working hours, on-call shifts, and occupational injuries among hospital physicians.
  • Using a case-crossover design, it analyzes data from 556 Finnish physicians over a 14-year period.
  • The findings indicate that longer shifts and more consecutive working days increase the risk of injuries.

Essence

  • Accumulated working hours and on-call shifts are associated with a higher risk of occupational injuries among hospital physicians. Specifically, three to four long shifts or on-call shifts significantly increase injury likelihood.

Key takeaways

  • Three to four long (>12 h) shifts increase the likelihood of with an odds ratio (OR) of 2.14. This indicates that extended work periods can compromise physician safety.
  • Three to four on-call shifts are linked to a higher injury risk, with an OR of 3.54. This highlights the dangers associated with frequent on-call duties.
  • Weekly working hours correlate with injury risk, showing an OR of 1.03. This suggests that as weekly hours increase, so does the likelihood of injuries.

Caveats

  • The study's sample size of 556 physicians limits the power to analyze specific subgroups, such as gender differences in injury risk.
  • Results may not be generalizable to all hospital physicians in Europe due to the limited number of injury events observed.

Definitions

  • Occupational injury: An injury sustained while performing work-related tasks or commuting to/from work.

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