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by hga
4442 days ago
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One solid reason is the same reason sleep deprivation is used in basic training. Most doctors, will, at some point in their life, have to make life and death decisions when they're operating far from 100% ... or at least that was true back in the days when they'd take calls at any hour of the day (as late as the '70s). Less dire, they have office hours they must keep unless they're really sick, and they certainly won't be at 100% every day. So this is useful training, albeit at a cost. Although if they make a mistake that kills a patient during residency and learn they can't deal with the consequences of that, I suppose the earlier the better. They can of course move to less life and death specialties. |
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If your goal is to reduce medical errors, create systems that don't depend on a single person's fluctuating energy level (e.g. have two doctors responsible for each patient, keep patient loads low enough that they can deal, automate as much as possible with computer systems (e.g. billing), and delegate to e.g. PAs for mundane diagnoses). Exhausted people make mistakes, can't work or think as quickly, are less creative, and are generally less happy. All the technology in the world won't help you if the key decision makers screw up at the wrong time.
After all, coffee does exist for those times when your natural energy level won't do it for you. ;)