How do surgical residents and non-physician practitioners play together in the sandbox?

INTRODUCTION The reduction of resident work hours due to the 80-hour workweek has created pressure on academic health-care systems to find "replacement residents." At the authors' institution, a group of nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs), collectively referred to as non-physician practitioners (NPPs), were hired as these reinforcements, such that the number of NPPs (56) was almost twice the number of clinical categorical surgery residents (37). An experienced leader with national credibility was hired to run the NPP program. On each service, the call system was changed to a night float system, whereby residents were pulled from traditional resident teams to serve as nighttime residents during the week. A total of 1-3 NPPs were hired for each team, but whether NPPs worked for the team as a whole, or were assigned to individual attendings, was left to the discretion of the division chiefs. One year after the start of this program, the authors wanted to study the effects it has had on both surgery resident education and NPP job satisfaction. METHODS An electronic, anonymous survey was conducted during a monthly surgery resident meeting, and out of 72 categorical and preliminary surgery residents, 50% submitted answers to 12 questions. A similar electronic survey was administered to all 56 NPPs, with 45% responding. RESULTS Overall, 63% of residents believed that lines of communication between surgery team members were clear, and 58% of residents and 71% of NPPs believed that attendings, residents, and NPPs worked together effectively. A total of 91% of residents believed that the addition of NPPs to the teams was positive overall, and 80% of NPPs were satisfied with their positions. Overall, 60% of residents and 50% of NPPs felt that educational goals were being met. DISCUSSION Implementation of the 80-hour workweek and introduction of NPs and PAs onto the inpatient surgical services has altered resident education at the authors' institution. Although overall most residents view the addition of NPPs to the clinical services as positive, there are concerns about the program. Although hired to fill the void left by decreasing labor hours of residents, NPPs do not necessarily have the same goals as surgery residents and there is confusion about how NPPs fit into the hierarchy of the traditional surgical team.

[1]  S. Bhananker,et al.  Resident work hours , 2003, Current opinion in anaesthesiology.

[2]  Sanjay Saint,et al.  Systematic Review: Effects of Resident Work Hours on Patient Safety , 2004, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[3]  J. Weigelt,et al.  Resident work hours: what they are really doing. , 2004, Archives of surgery.

[4]  C. Pellegrini,et al.  Professionalism and the shift mentality: how to reconcile patient ownership with limited work hours. , 2005, Archives of surgery.

[5]  D. Bates,et al.  Improving safety with information technology. , 2003, The New England journal of medicine.

[6]  R. Shamberger,et al.  Experience with a nurse practitioner program in the surgical department of a children's hospital. , 1992, Journal of Pediatric Surgery.

[7]  J. Heinrich,et al.  One hospital's successful 20-year experience with physician assistants in graduate medical education. , 1999, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[8]  Debra F. Weinstein,et al.  Duty hours for resident physicians--tough choices for teaching hospitals. , 2002, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  Michelle C Specht,et al.  Effects of limited work hours on surgical training. , 2002, Journal of the American College of Surgeons.

[10]  J. Riggio,et al.  Attitudes About Patient Safety: A Survey of Physicians-in-Training , 2005, American journal of medical quality : the official journal of the American College of Medical Quality.

[11]  G. Victorino,et al.  Physician assistant influence on surgery residents. , 2003, Archives of surgery.

[12]  A. Resnick,et al.  Challenges of the 80-hour resident work rules: collaboration between surgeons and nonphysician practitioners. , 2004, The Surgical clinics of North America.

[13]  M. Styles Nurse practitioners creating new horizons for the 1990s. , 1990, The Nurse practitioner.