The fatigue paradox: Team perceptions of physician fatigue
- PMID: 34174116
- DOI: 10.1111/medu.14591
The fatigue paradox: Team perceptions of physician fatigue
Abstract
Objectives: Ongoing calls to implement fatigue risk management in residency education assume a shared understanding of physician fatigue as a workplace hazard, yet we lack empirical evidence that all health care team members maintain this assumption. Thus, this study seeks to explore how health care team members understand the role of physician fatigue in an effort to inform the implementation of fatigue risk management in residency training and medical practice.
Methods: This study uses constructivist grounded theory to explore perceptions of workplace fatigue and its impact on clinical practice. We conducted individual semi-structured interviews with physicians, nurses and senior residents across four hospitals in 8 different specialties for a total of 40 participants. Constant comparative analysis guided data analysis and led to the final grounded theory.
Results: While participants outlined multiple problematic manifestations of physician fatigue on clinical performance, they were reluctant to acknowledge any negative impact of fatigue on patient care. We refer to these contradictions as the fatigue paradox. Four key themes sustain the fatigue paradox: the indefatigable physician, blind spots, faith in safety nets and the minimisation of fatigue-related events.
Conclusions: This study suggests that health care team members do not universally feel that physician fatigue is problematic for patient care, despite providing multiple examples to the contrary. This paradoxical understanding of fatigue likely exists because the system relies on fatigued physicians, particularly trainees, and provides few mechanisms to critically examine fatigue. Successful implementation of fatigue risk management in residency training may prove elusive if clinical supervisors are skeptical of the potentially negative impact of workplace fatigue.
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd and The Association for the Study of Medical Education.
Comment in
-
A wake-up call: Time to raise physicians' awareness of the consequences of fatigue.Med Educ. 2021 Dec;55(12):1342-1344. doi: 10.1111/medu.14655. Epub 2021 Sep 12. Med Educ. 2021. PMID: 34472652 No abstract available.
References
REFERENCES
-
- Philibert I. Sleep loss and performance in residents and nonphysicians: a meta-analytic examination. Sleep. 2005;28(11):1392-1402.
-
- Bilimoria KY, Chung JW, Hedges LV, et al. National cluster-randomized trial of duty-hour flexibility in surgical training. N Engl J Med. 2016;374(8):713-727.
-
- Ayas NT, Barger LK, Cade BE, et al. Extended work duration and the risk of self-reported percutaneous injuries in interns. JAMA. 2006;296(9):1055-1062.
-
- Veasey S, Rosen R, Barzansky B, Rosen I, Owens J. Sleep loss and fatigue in residency training: a reappraisal. JAMA. 2002;288(9):1116-1124.
-
- Saxena AD, George CFP. Sleep and motor performance in on-call internal medicine residents. Sleep. 2005;28(11):1386-1391.
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
