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did you hear about Yale?

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  • did you hear about Yale?

    They have been slammed by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education because of the hours of their general surgery residency. They may even lose the accreditation if they can get it together. They didn't give their resients the required day off per week, and had them working well over 100 hours a week.



    They interviewed the putz in charge and he started making these really lame excuses about why it's important to have them participate in so many surgeries per week. (OK, how much can you actually learn if you're exhausted?!)



    It was on npr radio. I'm going to see if I can find a transcript and I'll post it!



    Jenn

  • #2
    Here's an article I found on it:



    SURGERY RESIDENTS' LONG HOURS DRAW WARNING FOR YALE

    The Boston Globe

    May 20, 2002

    By Anne Barnard



    NEW HAVEN - The decision sent shock waves through medical schools and

    hospitals.

    It left young surgeons at one of the country's most prestigious medical

    centers

    both alarmed and elated. And to many physicians, it signaled a turning

    point in

    the debate over the safety of hospital training programs that make new

    doctors

    work up to 120 hours a week.



    The board that oversees doctors' training has decided to strip its seal

    of

    approval next year from the general-surgery residency program at Yale

    University's teaching hospital unless the hospital makes major changes

    to

    residents' working conditions, Yale administrators said.



    The board is concerned that the surgeons-in-training averaged more than

    100

    hours a week on duty and sometimes spent every other night at the

    hospital, say

    faculty members who have seen its confidential report issued in March.



    Such a grueling schedule has long been considered normal in the world of

    surgery, even as doctors in some other specialties move to cut work

    hours, but

    long hours and heavy workloads have come under increasing scrutiny amid

    growing

    public concern about medical errors. For instance, New York officials

    blamed

    Mount Sinai Hospital for inadequate care after a man who donated part of

    his

    liver died from inhaling blood while in the care of a first-year

    resident who

    was tending 34 post-surgery patients.



    Leaders at Yale-New Haven Medical Center and Yale's School of Medicine

    vowed to

    do all they could to reform the program and head off the board's unusual

    action.

    Losing accreditation, faculty members said, would be almost unthinkable

    for a

    top institution: The program would no longer give graduates the

    credentials they

    need to be certified specialists. Some current residents would have to

    redo part

    of their training elsewhere. In the long term, the loss would hamper

    Yale's

    ability to recruit top surgeons and teach medical students, threatening

    its

    status as a major medical center.



    As a result, Yale-New Haven's leaders promise to spend $1 million on new

    support

    staff to ease residents' burdens. They are betting that the

    Accreditation

    Council for Graduate Medical Education will relent when they present

    planned

    changes in August. But in the meantime, the seriousness of the situation

    has

    riveted faculty at medical centers in Boston and elsewhere - not because

    Yale-New Haven's surgery program is unusual, but because it isn't.



    ''All programs are worried they're going to come under more scrutiny,''

    said Dr.

    Deborah DeMarco, dean for graduate medical education at University of

    Massachusetts Medical Center in Worcester. Trying to preempt a

    crackdown,

    hospitals such as UMass and Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's are

    now

    drawing up plans to reduce hours in their surgery programs, even as some

    program

    directors remain skeptical of hours limits.



    Several Yale-New Haven surgery residents said last week that they were

    pleased

    with the ruling despite the uncertainty it brought. They said it gave

    the

    program the external push it needed to make changes, from cutting down

    on menial

    tasks that were crowding out their education to slashing work hours that

    made

    them fear harming a patient.



    ''You get to the point where you may be hurting instead of helping,''

    said

    another resident, who asked not to be named as he grabbed a falafel from

    one of

    the many food carts stationed outside the hospital to serve rushed

    doctors and

    nurses. ''You're right on that edge.''



    ''I'm ecstatic,'' said Dr. Steven Williams, 30, a third-year resident

    who once

    tried to unionize Yale residents and was one of several surgeons who

    reported

    the long hours to the council during a review last summer. While faculty

    had

    recently started paying more attention to residents' needs, he said,

    serious

    change didn't start until Yale faced losing the accreditation.



    Even Dr. Stephen Kavic, 30, who thinks asking for shorter hours ''sounds

    like

    wanting more recess,'' said the ruling would bring changes he had pushed

    for

    without success, like relief from paperwork. ''Yale needed an impetus to

    change,'' he said.



    Yale's new chairman of surgery, Dr. Robert Udelsman, arrived last year

    with a

    mandate to make the program the best in the world, but instead finds

    himself

    fighting for its very survival - and acting as an involuntary poster

    child for a

    reform movement he admits ''was not on my radar screen.''



    ''Do I think an 80-hour work week is reasonable? My opinion is

    immaterial,'' he

    said Wednesday afternoon, having worked since 6:30 a.m. to remove three

    thyroids. ''I don't have the luxury of a philosophical debate. Surgeons,

    when a

    blood vessel gets loose, when bad things happen in the operating room,

    we're

    used to dealing with that. You say a few words, you get it together, you

    move

    on.''



    Now, his mission is clear: make Yale a national model. ''Our residents

    were

    working too hard,'' he said. ''We have to change the culture. They can't

    be

    indentured servants, but highly skilled apprentices.''



    To some medical educators, the accreditation council's action at Yale is

    evidence that after years of debate, medicine's powers that be have come

    down on

    the side of significantly cutting hours.



    In recent years, many in the medical establishment have come to agree

    that

    financial pressure on hospitals to treat sicker patients more quickly

    has made

    residents' days more intense, hampered their education, and left them

    feeling

    like cheap labor. Applications to surgery programs are down.



    But the movement to limit work hours has been driven mainly by groups

    such as

    residents' unions and the American Medical Students Association.

    Residents sued

    hospitals May 8, saying the centralized program for assigning them to

    hospitals

    keeps them from negotiating better wages and working conditions.



    Fifty-six US representatives have signed on to a bill to cut resident

    hours,

    modeled on regulations in New York, the only state to limit hours by

    law. And

    the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is to rule soon on a

    petition

    asking that doctors be regulated more like pilots.



    Medical traditionalists still argue that long hours allow surgeons to

    learn more

    and give better care by shepherding patients from arrival to discharge.

    But many

    hospital officials now think the debate has shifted from whether to

    limit hours

    to how, by how much, and how to pay for it. Next month, the

    accreditation

    council, which does not now cap surgery hours, is expected to recommend

    new

    guidelines of closer to 80 hours a week for all residents.



    And Yale-New Haven's woes got medical insiders' attention like nothing

    else.

    Technically, a restructuring made surgery there a new program that could

    lose

    its status for faults that would usually draw only secret probation.

    Still, the

    ruling stunned observers at Boston teaching hospitals.



    ''Wow,'' said Dr. Daniel Lowenstein, Harvard Medical School's dean for

    medical

    education. ''It's just a great shock and surprise.''



    ''The fact that such a prestigious hospital was cited kind of took

    people's

    breath away,'' said Sandy Shea, director of the Committee of Interns and

    Residents, a union at Boston Medical Center.



    But the debates are far from over. The estimated $1 million in new

    annual costs

    to fix a single program with 45 residents, less than a tenth of Yale-New

    Haven's

    total, hints at the enormous expense of compliance.



    At Yale, Dr. Rosemarie Fisher, director of graduate medical education,

    says the

    challenge is to make sure doctors learn as much in less time. And Dr.

    Sherwin

    Nuland, a clinical professor and surgeon, said the hospital was

    ''bending over

    backward to prove what a good boy it is.'' He said the real problem is

    lack of

    supervision. ''That's something to squeal about ... not that we work too

    long or

    don't get paid enough, but that we're here to learn and our teachers are

    lying

    down on the job.''



    Surgery chairman Udelsman marvels at the sea change from when he

    finished his

    residency at Johns Hopkins in 1989. ''We worked 36 [hours] on and 12

    off. That's

    just what we did.''



    Williams, the third-year resident who sought to change the status quo,

    said he

    cares about patients as much as the previous generation, but wants to

    see

    surgeons move away from a workaholic culture.



    ''They try to change you ... All you're going to be about is surgery,''

    said

    Williams, who by contrast runs a medical consulting company and owns

    part of a

    nightclub. ''I'm a very millennium-2000 type of doctor. I love medicine.

    I care

    about medicine. But I also care about my family and friends.''




    Comment


    • #3
      The surgery residents we know at UTSW's Parkland hospital have similar schedules (100+ hrs a week) and similar call (often q2). Parkland was put on probation a short while back because of these problems. Nothing has changed....



      Jennifer

      Comment


      • #4
        That guy's comment is infuriating "we worked 36 hours on and 12 off, that's just what we did" - well, *SORRY* buddy! Get a life! I am SO SO SO SO SO *sick* of these "traditionalist" surgeons whose life revolves around surgery. I am happy about this - and still skeptical about what will actually happen as a result. I have heard whispers that this program might have some "changes" this next year but I'm not holding my breath. They will probably do something really whacked like give them a tuesday off - so that you still can't have an entire weekend off. Ever.

        Comment


        • #5
          Well, after we left UF, their ID program was put on probation for the same reason....and then a few months later, the ENTIRE internal med program including all fellowships was put on probation by the accrediting counsel.



          The bottom line in my eyes is that they may have worked those same shifts years ago, but that doesn't make it right. Also, with changing insurance regs, etc....interns and residents are doing more admits and discharges each day.....the lengths of stays are much shorter and there is a great deal more work to be done....you don't have the benefit of following a patient for a week...you are discharging them after a few hours and admitting someone else.....etc...



          Kris
          "I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I intended to be."
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