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Sleep Disturbance and Short Sleep as Risk Factors for Depression and Perceived Medical Errors in First-Year Residents

Authors :
Peter X.-K. Song
Srijan Sen
David A. Kalmbach
J. Todd Arnedt
Constance Guille
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2017.

Abstract

Study Objectives While short and poor quality sleep among training physicians has long been recognized as problematic, the longitudinal relationships among sleep, work hours, mood, and work performance are not well understood. Here, we prospectively characterize the risk of depression and medical errors based on preinternship sleep disturbance, internship-related sleep duration, and duty hours. Methods Survey data from 1215 nondepressed interns were collected at preinternship baseline, then 3 and 6 months into internship. We examined how preinternship sleep quality and internship sleep and work hours affected risk of depression at 3 months, per the Patient Health Questionnaire 9. We then examined the impact of sleep loss and work hours on depression persistence from 3 to 6 months. Finally, we compared self-reported errors among interns based on nightly sleep duration (≤6 hr vs. >6 hr), weekly work hours (

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b271aeec357f8685e8dbe9555df1e138