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Resident duty hour requirements in the U.S. are still evolving as stakeholders continue to debate how best to (re)structure postgraduate medical education.
There is concern that current restrictions may be detrimental to patient care and resident training. To investigate these issues, the investigators will be conducting a one-year, prospective randomized trial to examine how flexibility of duty hour requirements affects patient care when compared to current resident duty hour requirements. Further information about the study is available on the FIRST Trial website http://www.thefirsttrial.org/.
Full description
Residency programs will be randomized to either (1) an intervention arm that eliminates several Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) duty hour requirements or (2) to a usual care arm where programs will continue adhering to current ACGME requirements. Programs in the intervention arm will be granted a waiver from current duty hour requirements by the ACGME and allowed to eliminate all resident duty hour rules with the following exceptions: Duty hours limited to 80 hours/week averaged over 4 weeks, minimum of one free day (no duty)/week averaged over 4 weeks, may not take in-house call more frequently than every 3rd night, averaged over 4 weeks, allowed to increase duty requirement flexibility for chief residents. The intent of the intervention arm is to allow flexibility in surgical resident duty hours and improve continuity of care. Subsequently, the investigators will compare multiple postoperative outcomes between the two study arms using data collected through the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP). The results of this study will provide high-quality empirical evidence upon which to base resident duty hour requirements in the future.
Updated April 1, 2014
Detailed statistical analysis plan available on the FIRST Trial website. http://www.thefirsttrial.org/Approval/Approval
A listing of the 152 ACS-NSQIP hospitals that have elected to participate in the FIRST Trial is available on the FIRST Trial website. http://www.thefirsttrial.org/Hospitals/Hospitals
Updated July 14, 2014
Post-Randomization documents available for control and intervention arms on FIRST Trial website.
http://www.thefirsttrial.org/PostRandomization/PostRandomization
Updated August 2014
'FIRST Trial-Policies & Procedures Survey for Program Directors' survey administered to general surgery program directors via Survey Monkey.
Updated January 2015
Resident survey regarding duty hour policies and procedures administered at the end of the annual ABS In-Training Examination (ABSITE®).
Updated April 1, 2015
The Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) was convened March 10, 2015 to review the results of planned interim analysis. After review, they voted to allow the FIRST Trial to continue. All other aspects of the trial are on track.
Updated May 24, 2016
Results from the study were released February 2, 2016 and the study has been extended for an additional year, through the 2016-2017 academic year.
Additional programs were enrolled in the one-year extension study.
March 10, 2017
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) released a final set of revisions to the professional standards all accredited US residency and fellowship programs follow in preparing today's physicians for a lifetime of practice. The new model also directly addresses requests from medical educators and residents by recognizing the risk of burnout and depression for physicians. Programs and institutions will be responsible for prioritizing physician well-being, ensuring protected time with patients, minimizing non-physician obligations, and ensuring that residents have the opportunity to access medical and dental care.
The total number of clinical and educational hours for residents has not changed. Starting the 2017-2018 academic year, the standards require that all programs and residents adhere to the maximum limits averaged over four weeks:
Updated September 12, 2017
Resident survey data collected with the 2016 and 2017 ABSITE Survey were collected and analyzed. Topics that emerged for further qualitative and quantitative analysis are as follows:
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Volunteers
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Interventional model
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152 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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