Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04123015

Clinical Activity During Night-shift: an Ecological Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
41 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Geneva · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
22 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

A convenient sample of internal medicine residents will be observed during their nightshift work in the wards of the department of internal medicine of a university hospital. The epidemiology of night calls and emergencies, including incidence, causes, management, and prognosis, will be assessed prospectively. The impact of nightshift work on sleep, stress, quality of life, regrets, and general well being of the residents observed will be measured through completion of validated questionnaires. Quality of handoff sessions will also be assessed.

Detailed description

Various medical problems of patients admitted to an internal medicine ward can worsen during the stay. Furthermore, new, unidentified problems can develop (complications, medication errors, delirium, acute anxiety or pain, etc). During evenings, nights and week-ends, emergent needs of hospitalized patients are usually cared for by physicians in-training, who are in charge of a large number of patients. Hence, physicians should have a wide range of medical knowledge and procedural skills and know how acute problems are dealt with in the unique environment of the healthcare institution. Training physicians should also be able to obtain information and counseling efficiently, either from clinical guidelines, senior supervisors, or specialists. These requirements may represent a significant stress for training physicians and may have a major impact on their health, quality of life, and finally on the quality of inpatient care. Nightshift work may lead later to a high burden of regrets among caregivers. Better knowledge of training needs, organization features, coping strategies, and regrets associated with nightshift duty are important to prepare training physicians to that demanding and necessary task. Understanding of the epidemiology of night-shift ward emergencies could provide guidance concerning the required level of staffing and training of the responding medical team. Furthermore, efficient transmission of information between day and night staff (so-called handoffs) is a difficult yet important part of care. Systematic observation of handoff sessions between physicians before and after nightshifts may enhance previous knowledge on key components of these topics. The investigators will evaluate the incidence causes, and prognosis of night-shift emergencies in internal medicine wards by direct observation of the nightshift work of a convenient sample of internal medicine residents. By the means of before-and-after shift completion of various validated questionnaires, the investigators will explore quantitatively and qualitatively the physiological and psychological impact on nightshift work for physicians in training. The planned study will also provide qualitative and quantitative data concerning handoffs session, and the repercussions on night shift emergencies management.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2019-10-03
Primary completion
2020-04-21
Completion
2020-04-21
First posted
2019-10-10
Last updated
2020-09-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04123015. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.