Pages that link to "Q23911165"
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The following pages link to Effect of reducing interns' work hours on serious medical errors in intensive care units (Q23911165):
Displayed 50 items.
- Unraveling the complexities of circadian and sleep interactions with memory formation through invertebrate research (Q21129312) (← links)
- Impact of extended-duration shifts on medical errors, adverse events, and attentional failures (Q21144684) (← links)
- Long working hours, safety, and health: toward a national research agenda (Q23911210) (← links)
- Negative impacts of shiftwork and long work hours (Q23911213) (← links)
- Fatigue increases the risk of injury from sharp devices in medical trainees: results from a case-crossover study (Q23911824) (← links)
- Does simulator-based clinical performance correlate with actual hospital behavior? The effect of extended work hours on patient care provided by medical interns (Q23914203) (← links)
- Neurobehavioral, health, and safety consequences associated with shift work in safety-sensitive professions (Q23916704) (← links)
- Work-family conflict, cardiometabolic risk, and sleep duration in nursing employees (Q23917026) (← links)
- Medical and genetic differences in the adverse impact of sleep loss on performance: ethical considerations for the medical profession (Q23923348) (← links)
- Effective implementation of work-hour limits and systemic improvements (Q24091371) (← links)
- Should sleep-deprived surgeons be prohibited from operating without patients’ consent? (Q24169863) (← links)
- Adaptation of shift work schedules for preventing and treating sleepiness and sleep disturbances caused by shift work (Q24201558) (← links)
- Person-directed non-pharmacological interventions for preventing and treating sleepiness and sleep disturbances caused by shift work (Q24201566) (← links)
- Rates of medication errors among depressed and burnt out residents: prospective cohort study (Q24642039) (← links)
- Reducing interns' work hours led to fewer attentional failures and serious medical errors in intensive care units (Q24812171) (← links)
- Effect of intern's consecutive work hours on safety, medical education and professionalism. (Q24813172) (← links)
- The Case for Using Evidence-Based Guidelines in Setting Hospital and Public Health Policy (Q26749330) (← links)
- Scheduling in the context of resident duty hour reform (Q26865331) (← links)
- Finding the elusive balance between reducing fatigue and enhancing education: perspectives from American residents (Q26865409) (← links)
- Perspectives on the working hours of Australian junior doctors (Q27005587) (← links)
- Delinking resident duty hours from patient safety (Q28082872) (← links)
- Duty hours, quality of care, and patient safety: general surgery resident perceptions (Q28267454) (← links)
- The Effect of Restricting Residents' Duty Hours on Patient Safety, Resident Well-Being, and Resident Education: An Updated Systematic Review (Q28268454) (← links)
- Effects of the 2011 duty hour reforms on interns and their patients: a prospective longitudinal cohort study (Q28287789) (← links)
- The public health and safety consequences of sleep disorders (Q28301235) (← links)
- Sleep and recovery in physicians on night call: a longitudinal field study (Q28382941) (← links)
- Impact of proposed institute of medicine duty hours: family medicine residency directors' perspective (Q28383054) (← links)
- Outcomes of operations performed by attending surgeons after overnight trauma shifts (Q28383154) (← links)
- Resident duty hour modification affects perceptions in medical education, general wellness, and ability to provide patient care (Q28384091) (← links)
- Exposing physicians to reduced residency work hours did not adversely affect patient outcomes after residency (Q28384368) (← links)
- A delicate balance: physician work hours, patient safety, and organizational efficiency (Q28384438) (← links)
- Insomnia, comorbidity, and risk of injury among insured Americans: results from the America Insomnia Survey (Q28384459) (← links)
- Risks and causes of hospitalizations among physicians in Taiwan (Q28384742) (← links)
- Patient safety and quality of care continue to improve in NHS North West following early implementation of the European Working Time Directive (Q28384751) (← links)
- 16-hour call duty schedules: the Quebec experience (Q28386330) (← links)
- Resident duty hours in Canada: a survey and national statement (Q28386360) (← links)
- Deterioration of neurobehavioral performance in resident physicians during repeated exposure to extended duration work shifts. (Q28386390) (← links)
- Socioeconomic status, occupational characteristics, and sleep duration in African/Caribbean immigrants and US White health care workers (Q28387233) (← links)
- Attention and memory of medical residents after a night on call: a cross-sectional study (Q28387597) (← links)
- Implementing a 48 h EWTD-compliant rota for junior doctors in the UK does not compromise patients' safety: assessor-blind pilot comparison (Q28387939) (← links)
- Shifting perceptions: a pre-post study to assess the impact of a senior resident rotation bundle (Q28388249) (← links)
- Total and cause-specific mortality of U.S. nurses working rotating night shifts (Q28388526) (← links)
- Does type of hospital ownership influence physicians' daily work schedules? An observational real-time study in German hospital departments (Q28389132) (← links)
- Cognitive debiasing 1: origins of bias and theory of debiasing (Q28389266) (← links)
- Applying mathematical models to predict resident physician performance and alertness on traditional and novel work schedules (Q28389291) (← links)
- Acute myocardial infarction: a comparison of the risk between physicians and the general population (Q28389487) (← links)
- An innovative on-call system for paediatric residency programs: The alternate night float (Q28390548) (← links)
- Armodafinil for treatment of excessive sleepiness associated with shift work disorder: a randomized controlled study (Q28391821) (← links)
- Association of current work and sleep situations with excessive daytime sleepiness and medical incidents among Japanese physicians (Q28392555) (← links)
- Are residents' extended shifts associated with adverse events? (Q28392785) (← links)