Sleep Deprivation, Burnout, and Acute Care Surgery

Abera, Hermona; Hunt, Maya; Levin, Jeremy H.

Sleep Deprivation, Burnout, and Acute Care Surgery

Abera, Hermona; Hunt, Maya; Levin, Jeremy H.

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To define what sleep deprivation is, how it relates to the growing problem of burnout within surgeons, and what can be done to mitigate its effects. RECENT FINDINGS: There is a growing awareness that sleep deprivation, in both its acute and chronic manifestations, plays an immense role in burnout. The physical and mental manifestations of sleep deprivation are manifold, effecting nearly every physiologic system. Studies evaluating strategies at mitigating the effects of sleep deprivation are promising, including work done with napping, stimulant use, and service restructuring, but are fundamentally limited by generalizability, scale, and scope. SUMMARY: The overwhelming majority of data published on sleep deprivation is limited by size, scope, and generalizability. Within acute care surgery, there is a dearth of studies that adequately define and describe sleep deprivation as it pertains to high-performance professions. Given the growing issue of burnout amongst surgeons paired with a growing patient population that is older and more complex, strategies to combat sleep deprivation are paramount for surgeon retention and wellbeing.

View Resource
Current Trauma Reports
2023
Profession(s)
Surgeons
Topic(s)
Burnout
Resource Types
Commentaries & Blogs
Study Type(s)
Expert Opinion, Commentary, etc.
Action Strategy Area(s)
Physical & Mental Health
Setting(s)
Hospital
Academic Role(s)
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