Journal of General and Family Medicine (Mar 2023)

Impact of duty hours on competency‐related knowledge acquisition among community hospital residents

  • Kazuya Nagasaki,
  • Yuji Nishizaki,
  • Chisato Hachisuka,
  • Tomohiro Shinozaki,
  • Taro Shimizu,
  • Yu Yamamoto,
  • Kiyoshi Shikino,
  • Sho Fukui,
  • Sho Nishiguchi,
  • Kohta Katayama,
  • Masaru Kurihara,
  • Hiroyuki Kobayashi,
  • Yasuharu Tokuda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jgf2.594
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 2
pp. 87 – 93

Abstract

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Abstract Background The effect of duty hour (DH) restrictions on postgraduate residents' acquisition of clinical competencies is unclear. We evaluated the relationship between DHs and competency‐related knowledge acquisition using the General Medicine In‐training Examination (GM‐ITE). Methods We conducted a multicenter, cross‐sectional study of community hospital residents among 2019 GM‐ITE examinees. Self‐reported average DHs per week were classified into five DH categories and the competency domains were classified into four areas: symptomatology and clinical reasoning (CR), physical examination and clinical procedure (PP), medical interview and professionalism (MP), and disease knowledge (DK). The association between these scores and DHs was examined using random‐intercept linear models with and without adjustment for confounding factors. Results We included 4753 participants in the analyses. Of these, 31% were women, and 49.1% were in the postgraduate year (PGY) 2. Mean CR and MP scores were lower among residents in Category 1 (<50 h) than in residents in Category 3 (≥60 and <70 h; reference group). Mean DK scores were lower among residents in Categories 1 and 2 (≥50 and <60 h) than in the reference group. PGY‐2 residents in Categories 1 and 2 had lower CR scores than those in Category 3; however, PGY‐1 residents in Category 5 showed higher scores. Conclusions The relationship between DHs and each competency area is not strictly linear. The acquisition of knowledge of physical examination and clinical procedures skills in particular may not be related to DHs.

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