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Why Surgeons Struggle With Workhour Reforms James E Coverdill

  • SKU: BELL-46538942
Why Surgeons Struggle With Workhour Reforms James E Coverdill
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Why Surgeons Struggle With Workhour Reforms James E Coverdill instant download after payment.

Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 3.8 MB
Pages: 224
Author: James E. Coverdill, John D. Mellinger
ISBN: 9780826501073, 9780826501059, 9780826501066, 9782020034111, 2020034115, 0826501079, 0826501052, 0826501060, 2020034116
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Why Surgeons Struggle With Workhour Reforms James E Coverdill by James E. Coverdill, John D. Mellinger 9780826501073, 9780826501059, 9780826501066, 9782020034111, 2020034115, 0826501079, 0826501052, 0826501060, 2020034116 instant download after payment.

On July 1, 2003, work-hour reforms were enacted nationally for the roughly 129,000 resident physicians in the United States. The reforms limit weekly work hours (a maximum of eighty per week) and in-hospital call (no more than once every three nights), mandate days free of clinical and educational obligations (one day in seven), and regulate other aspects of resident work life. Why Surgeons Struggle with Work-Hour Reforms focuses on general surgeons, a historically long-hour specialty, who fiercely opposed the reforms and are among the least compliant. Why do surgeons struggle with the reforms? Why do they continue to work long hours and view the act of doing so as reasonable if not quintessentially professional? Although the analysis is situated in the growing scientific literature on the consequences of fatigue, the authors do not adjudicate between the claims of surgeons and reform advocates about the effects of long work hours on patient or provider safety. Rather, the aim is to explore and explain how aspects of the occupational culture of surgeons and the social organization of surgical training and practice interlock to impede the reforms.

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