Resident
Duty Hours
ACGME/AMA
ACGME regulations are summarized below:
Definitions
Total duty hours include:
- Scheduled time providing direct patient care or supervised
patient care that contributes to the ability of the resident
physician to meet educational goals and objectives
- Scheduled time to participate in formal educational activities
- Scheduled time providing administrative and patient care services
of limited or no educational value time needed to transfer the
care of patients.
Organized educational activities are of two types:
- Formal educational activities include scheduled educational
programs such as conferences, seminars, and grand rounds
- Patient care educational activities include individualized
instruction with a more senior resident or attending physician
and teaching rounds with an attending physician.
Regulations
1) Resident physician total duty hours must not exceed 80 hours
per week, averaged over a two-week period
- An increase of 5-10% may be appropriate for some training programs.
Requests for such an extension require the approval of the ACGME's
Program Requirements Committee and Board of Directors.
2) That workdays that exceed 12 hours are defined as on-call.
3) That scheduled on-call assignments should not exceed 24 hours.
Residents may remain on-duty for up to 30 hours to
- Complete the transfer of care
- Patient follow-up
- Education
However, residents may not be assigned
- New patients
- Cross-coverage of other providers' patients
- Continuity clinic
4) That on-call be no more frequent than every third night and
there be at least one consecutive 24-hour duty-free period every
seven days both averaged over a two-week period.
5) That on-call from home be counted in the calculation of total
duty hours and on-call frequency if the resident physician can
routinely expect to get less than eight hours of sleep.
6) That there should be a duty-free interval of at least 10 hours
prior to returning to duty.
7) That limits on total duty hours must not adversely impact resident
physician participation in the organized educational activities
of the residency program. Formal educational activities must be
scheduled and available within total duty hour limits for all resident
physicians for at least eight hours per week averaged over a two-week
period.
8) That scheduled time providing patient care services of limited
or no educational value be minimized.
AAMC
The AAMC offers the following guidelines for resident duty hours:
1) No resident should be scheduled on-duty for more than 80 hours
in any week
- For clinical rotation settings, a resident should not be scheduled
for more than 24 consecutive hours
- For continuous duty in high-intensity settings (emergency rooms,
critical care units, etc.) residents should not be scheduled
for more than 12 consecutive hours
2) Duty-free intervals between periods of on-call should be at
least 8 hours
3) If moonlighting is authorized, time spent doing so should be
included within total duty hours; if unauthorized, moonlighting
should be prohibited
4) Residents should not have overnight on-duty call more frequently
than one night in three, as averaged over a four-week period
5) Residents should have at least 24 hours free of all assigned
duty every 7 days
6) On-duty time spent delivering patient care services of marginal
or no educational value should be minimized
New York State Regulations
The New York State government has previously passed laws concerning
resident duty hours. These stipulate that a resident must have
8 hours of rest between on-duty periods and that only a three-hour
debriefing period is allowed after a 24-hour continuous duty period.
These 405 rules conflict with some of the ACGME standards. After
July 1, 2003 programs in New York State must conform to the more
restrictive regulations, for example:
- A 10-hour rest period between on-duty calls
- A three-hour maximum debriefing period after 24 hours of continuous
duty
The WorkForce Software Solution
WorkForce Software is pleased to provide a specialized version
of our time and attendance solution for teaching hospitals that
need to maintain accreditation from the ACGME or compliance with
AAMC standards. For more information, please see the page on the Resident
Duty Hours Version of our time and attendance software.
References
Accreditation Council on Graduate
Medical Education (ACGME)
ACGME Resident
Duty Hours FAQ
Association of American Medical
Colleges (AAMC)
American
College of Surgeons Statement on Residency Work Hours
American
College of Physicians Paper on Resident Duty Hours
Notice: The information above and the references
are provided “as-is” without any representation as to
their accuracy or applicability to your specific situation. We
recommend that you seek competent legal advice for all employment
issues.
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