Sleep Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Programmed Naps on Decision Making of Residents During Working Hours.
Sleep deprivation produces changes including alteration of mood, irritability, fatigue, less focus and disorientation, also perceptive distortions, visual hallucinations and considering tasks harder and less pleasant. In resident physicians, these alterations have been shown to affect their work performance. Naps have proved to improve arousal and attention, alertness and performance. Those longer than 90 minutes promote a learning process similar to that occurring in REM sleep. Therefore a nap schedule could improve the decision making of residents during their working hours.
Sleep deprivation produces changes including alteration of mood, irritability, fatigue, less
focus and disorientation, also perceptive distortions, visual hallucinations and considering
tasks harder and less pleasant. Extenuating working hours provoke sleep deprivation, which
deteriorates work performance, produces mood disorders and increase chances of error.
In a survey performed to 3600 resident physicians in the USA it was observed that working
more than 24 continuous hours was related with a higher risk of traffic accidents, as well as
a higher tendency towards medical mistakes due to overstress, the most common being a
diminished capability of performing a previously known procedure; also there were
difficulties to solve problems generated by coworkers or relatives. Other study determinated
that after a night shift the levels of daytime sleepiness were similar or higher than those
of patients with narcolepsy or sleep apnea. The lack of sleep affects the performance of
tasks, producing alterations similar to those in alcoholic intoxication, with a decline in
visual attention, reaction speed, visual memory and creative thinking. Even though the
effects of sleep deprivation in resident have been difficult to quantify due to confounders,
there are indicators as decline in performance, which seems higher in less experienced
physicians, with a higher alteration in reasoning and reaction time. It has been found in
physicians in training (anesthesiology residents) that mistakes in administration of epidural
anesthesia are more frequent after sleep deprivation; and a resident performing monitoring
tasks after a night shift was more liable to mistakes that after a resting night, being also
less likely to recognize arrhythmias in an electrocardiogram. Sleep deprivation affects
coordination and skill, as observed in laparoscopist surgeons who took more time to complete
a procedure after sleep deprivation than those who had rested. This results made the ACGME to
establish a limitation in working hours during the residence.
Naps from 30 minutes to 4 hours improve alertness and performance. Studies comparing naps and
caffeine have shown that naps not only improve arousal and attention but also helps to
consolidate memory in those longer than 90 minutes. Furthermore, naps with slow wave and REM
sleep are partially equivalent to a night's sleep, restoring the damage from baseline. It has
been proven that naps promote a learning process similar to that occurring in a complete
night sleep, which correlates with phase 2 of REM sleep. Therefore a nap schedule could
improve the decision making of residents during their working hours.
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