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1  and the educational time of on-call medical interns.
2 dical errors and motor vehicle crashes among interns.
3 e Medical Education, pose safety hazards for interns.
4 nditions they will encounter as new surgical interns.
5  the prevalence of depression among surgical interns.
6 ikelihood of suicidal ideation among medical interns.
7  aptitudes compared with the previous year's interns.
8 confidence compared with the previous year's interns.
9 r these responsibilities that they assume as interns.
10  the development of mood symptoms in medical interns.
11 tending physicians, two residents, and three interns.
12      Of the 115 responders, 96% were medical interns.
13                                 Of those, 94 interns (11.8%; weighted number, 173 [11.9%]) reported a
14 t over the course of internship year, 12% of interns (12 of 100) assigned to wCBT endorsed suicidal i
15 BCRP interns (9.8%) were UIM; 35 of 241 BCRP interns (14.5%) were UIM during the 5-year restructured
16 cise in significantly less time than control interns (166 +/- 52 vs. 220 +/- 39 seconds, P < 0.05); t
17                          A total of 62.2% of interns (199 of 320) agreed to take part in the study; 1
18 sed suicidal ideation compared with 21.2% of interns (21 of 99) assigned to ACG.
19   Compared with the normal US population, 50 interns (32%) were 0.5 SD less than the mean on the 8-it
20                               There were 640 interns (56.4%) who reported work-related trauma exposur
21                                    Of the 81 interns, 56 participated (69%), for a total of 165 gener
22                                   Twenty-six interns (60.5%) were women.
23 h quality of life is perceived as better for interns (61.9%), most residents believe that it is worse
24                                Although many interns (67%) reported that they daily or weekly reflect
25                           Data from 43 of 52 interns (82.7%) encompassing 95 275 hours of observation
26                                      Of 1048 interns, 870 completed the initial survey (response rate
27 ng Diversity Council era, 27 of the 275 BCRP interns (9.8%) were UIM; 35 of 241 BCRP interns (14.5%)
28       In multilevel modeling, the individual intern accounted for 8.1% of overall variance in time sp
29  For 10 months following simulator training, intern airway management skills were scored in actual pa
30                                              Interns also made 5.6 times as many serious diagnostic e
31 p survey, clinical skills assessment scores, intern American Board of Surgeons In-Training Examinatio
32                 Interrater reliabilities for intern and team technical scores were both r = .96 and f
33  belief that many factors affecting both the intern and the hospital staff make the rotating program
34 .1%) in the Mindfulness Intervention for New Interns and 146 (42.9%) in the control arm.
35 early 1900s, competition among hospitals for interns and among medical students for good internships
36 ontrolled patient simulator to train medical interns and demonstrate their competence in initial airw
37 ences in time spent in patients' rooms among interns and during rounds constitute an opportunity to d
38 quently unaware of the presence of CVCs than interns and residents (25.8% and 30.5%, respectively, vs
39              There was no difference between interns and residents in ordering radiographs or electro
40   Reduced sleep time is commonplace for many interns and residents.
41                                   Of the 106 interns and senior medical students who consented, 3 wer
42    Technical scores were calculated for both interns and teams; nontechnical scores applied only to t
43  (those with a positive depression screen as interns and those without).
44 curriculum (Mindfulness Intervention for New Interns) and a monthly mindfulness refresher implemented
45 students, 279 (76%) were foundation doctors (interns) and had not commenced formal surgical training
46 criptive statistics are reported overall, by intern, and for 5 clinical service categories.
47 nding surgeons, 32 fellows, 86 residents, 19 interns, and 4 physicians with an undetermined level of
48                          My experience as an intern (anno 1953) treating a youngster in diabetic keto
49  subject to limits on the number of patients interns are allowed to admit.
50                      Today's general surgery interns are faced with increased duty hour restrictions
51               In teaching hospitals, medical interns are first responders to in-hospital cardiac arre
52                Medical students and incoming interns are from generation Y.
53  to increase the risk for suicidal ideation, interns assigned to wCBT were less likely to endorse sui
54 guide to allocating time ever since I was an intern at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
55 CIPANTS: Prospective cohort study of medical interns at a single US academic medical center from July
56 a from this study offer a method to identify interns at higher risk for attrition at the start of tra
57 re obtained over a period of 14 days for 205 interns at six flexible programs and 193 interns at six
58 205 interns at six flexible programs and 193 interns at six standard programs.
59  lowest noncompletion rate for men was among interns at small community programs who were White, non-
60     The influx of new surgical residents and interns at the beginning of the academic year is assumed
61 medicine residents from postgraduate year 1 (interns) at an academic medical center wore an infrared
62 her critically ill patients, so an available intern attempted to place a triple-lumen catheter in the
63                      Less than half (44%) of interns believed that the new standards have decreased r
64  used several assessment tools, including an intern boot camp survey, clinical skills assessment scor
65 raduate Medical Education case logs from the intern class (N = 52) (with 16-hour work limit) compared
66    We present 8-year follow-up data from the intern class of 2007 to 2008 using a novel, nonparametri
67 medicine hospitalists, and internal medicine interns) classified individual nuclear stress tests usin
68 ls (nursing staff, medical staff [residents, interns, clinical fellows, and senior intensivists], and
69  internships in many teaching hospitals, the Intern Committee of the Henry Ford Hospital has surveyed
70 ementation of the ACGME duty-hour standards, interns commonly reported noncompliance with these requi
71 n their first year of postgraduate training, interns commonly work shifts that are longer than 24 hou
72  scores for personal distress (P<.001) among interns compared with norms.
73             Of 16 technical checklist items, interns completed a mean of 7 with a range of 1.5-11.
74                            LapMentor trained interns completed the 30 degrees camera navigation exerc
75  residents in their first postgraduate year (interns) completed 17,003 monthly reports that provided
76 ng (residents), and recent dental graduates (interns) - could diagnose cases of periodontitis using a
77  constraints, we instituted a unique 2-month intern curriculum (boot camp) incorporating knowledge-ba
78                                              Intern data including demographics, attendance at US or
79  bedside; the unit of analysis was a 24-hour intern day or interval of time within the day (eg, round
80 ty agreed or strongly agreed that the cohort interns demonstrated better patient care and procedural
81 ning and certification, all starting medical interns demonstrated poor airway management skills.
82                   Approximately one-third of interns demonstrated weekly symptoms of emotional exhaus
83 ork hospitals in the Northwell Health System interned during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, bet
84 who had participated in the primary study as interns during the 2007 to 2008 and 2008 to 2009 academi
85                            Recent changes in intern duty hours and supervision rules mandate that res
86                                              Interns enrolled sequentially in annual cohorts and comp
87 t tissue/breast surgery in the 16-hour shift intern era, whereas there was no decrease in trauma, vas
88 imation was common across rater groups, with interns exhibiting the highest rates in staging (49.6%)
89                                  Eliminating interns' extended work shifts in an intensive care unit
90                                  Half of all interns felt that the duty hour changes have decreased t
91        In a longitudinal cohort study of 250 interns (first-year residents) at 55 United States hospi
92 , five senior house officers (SHOs), and six interns formed four clinician groups.
93   A total of 249 categorical general surgery interns from 10 general surgery residency programs in th
94                          A total of 516 BCRP interns from 2011 to 2021 were included.
95 bedside during a 24-hour period varied among interns from 8.8% to 18.3%.
96 schedule, which provided coverage to on-duty interns from midnight to 7:00 a.m. so that they could fi
97 conducted at 2 university hospitals with 199 interns from multiple specialties during academic years
98  periodontists were the most accurate, while interns had more difficulty correctly identifying diseas
99 st-year training physicians (interns) in the Intern Health Study (IHS) and 435 recently widowed Healt
100 SIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: The ongoing Intern Health Study (IHS) is a prospective annual cohort
101    This cohort study evaluates data from the Intern Health Study and uses the 9-item Patient Health Q
102 y included 276 US physicians enrolled in the Intern Health Study since their first year of residency
103 N, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: As part of the Intern Health Study, a longitudinal cohort study of firs
104                        The institution of an intern home call schedule was not associated with increa
105 r restrictions, we expected that a period of intern home call would correlate with increased rates of
106   The benefits of the internship program for interns, host/employer, and supervisor/principal investi
107                   The 16-hour work limit for interns, implemented in July 2011, is associated with a
108 his observational longitudinal cohort study, interns in a Singapore-based teaching hospital were stud
109                        Direct observation of interns in actual initial airway events revealed excelle
110 p loss or sleepiness across trial days among interns in flexible programs than among those in standar
111 odontists, periodontal residents, and dental interns in Saudi Arabia.
112                          Similar to training interns in the US, the proportion of participants in Chi
113 cohort study of 2737 of the estimated 18,447 interns in US postgraduate residency programs from July
114 ipants were 4015 of the approximately 37 253 interns in US residency programs in all specialties duri
115 tress: 1,011 first-year training physicians (interns) in the Intern Health Study (IHS) and 435 recent
116 sts, 14 periodontal residents, and 17 dental interns, independently classified 25 periodontitis cases
117    Intra-rater reliability was highest among interns, indicating substantial agreement (kappa = 0.63-
118 es in the frequency of medical errors due to intern inexperience.
119                                   Of the 365 interns invited to participate, 340 (93.2%; 255 [75.0%]
120                                              Interns made 20.8 percent more serious medication errors
121  2203 patient-days involving 634 admissions, interns made 35.9 percent more serious medical errors du
122                                              Interns made substantially more serious medical errors w
123                                              Interns may be at risk for other occupation-related inju
124                                          Ann Intern Med 2021;174:157-166.
125 (JAMA), the Annals of Internal Medicine (Ann Intern Med), the Annals of Surgery (Ann Surg), Obstetric
126 recent systematic review, Bastos et al. (Ann Intern Med.
127 8 percutaneous injuries were reported (0.029/intern-month).
128 765 (44.0%; 95% CI, 43.0%-45.1%) of the 8553 intern-months assessed postimplementation (including vac
129 ng 2660 (61.5%; 95% CI, 60.0%-62.9%) of 4327 intern-months during which interns worked exclusively in
130 d (FYs 2004-2010), the first call went to an intern on home call.
131 ores and total scores were recorded for each intern on initial and repeat testing.
132 Our neonatal ICU has either a resident or an intern on-call by himself/herself at night, affording us
133 in learning and teaching activities than did interns on the control teams (learning: 20% of total tim
134                                              Interns on the experimental teams spent more time in lea
135                  However, use of coverage by interns on the nap schedule was impaired by their desire
136  particularly for first-year physicians (ie, interns), on the long-term mental health of physicians a
137 tion) were stratified by type of transition (intern only, resident only, or intern + resident) and co
138 er in transition vs control patients for the intern-only group (3.5% vs 2.0%; odds ratio [OR], 1.12 [
139 tal mortality for transition patients in the intern-only group and intern + resident group than for c
140 on vs control comparisons (30-day mortality: intern-only group, 14.5% vs 8.8%, OR, 1.17 [95% CI, 1.13
141  1.21 [95% CI, 1.12-1.31]; 90-day mortality: intern-only group, 21.5% vs 13.5%, OR, 1.14 [95% CI, 1.1
142 .8%; median length of stay, 3.0 days), 25938 intern-only, 26456 resident-only, and 11517 intern + res
143 d intern + resident group than for controls (intern-only: OR, 1.11 [95% CI, 1.02-1.21]; intern + resi
144 d with a significant decrease in categorical intern operative experience.
145 ave the power to examine outcomes related to intern or patient well-being.
146       Senior providers were more likely than interns or residents to follow CCDS.
147                                              Interns order significantly more arterial blood gases pe
148 th multiple linear regression, we found that interns ordered significantly (p = .02) greater numbers
149 se of 0.33 blood gases per infant amounts to interns ordering $169 more arterial blood gases per call
150              Additionally, LapMentor trained interns outperformed control subjects with regard to cam
151 h SHOs (P = .046) and for SHOs compared with interns (P = .025).
152 or registrars, 0.693 for SHOs, and 0.659 for interns; P = .009).
153 ursing staff and teaching faculty surveys of intern performance and aptitudes compared with the previ
154 elated PTSD was 3 times more prevalent among intern physicians than the general population.
155 with each consisting of one resident and two interns, plus multiple supervising attending physicians
156 o report experiencing sexual harassment than interns (postgraduate years 4 and 5 vs postgraduate year
157 nsive care unit team in a graded manner with interns present for the first 10 mins and more senior-le
158  proportion of nondesignated and categorical interns pursuing careers in general surgery scoring in t
159                                              Interns received 41 more minutes of sleep while on call
160 ed with the preceding 4 years, the 2011-2012 interns recorded a 25.8% decrease in total operative cas
161      Despite these small increases in sleep, interns reported less overall fatigue while on the nap s
162                                              Interns reported spending 11% of their time in education
163 dence interval [CI], 81.4%-85.5%) of 1278 of interns reported work hours in violation of the standard
164                                              Interns reporting at least 1 disability were included in
165              The examination for the Medical Intern Resident (MIR) is a multiple-choice test aimed at
166  intern-only, 26456 resident-only, and 11517 intern + resident end-of-rotation transitions occurred.
167 atio [OR], 1.12 [95% CI, 1.03-1.21]) and the intern + resident group (4.0% vs 2.1%; OR, 1.18 [95% CI,
168 sition patients in the intern-only group and intern + resident group than for controls (intern-only:
169 13.8% vs 8.9%, OR, 1.11 [95% CI, 1.04-1.18]; intern + resident group, 15.5% vs 9.1%, OR, 1.21 [95% CI
170 0.9% vs 13.6%, OR, 1.10 [95% CI, 1.05-1.16]; intern + resident group, 22.8% vs 14.0%, OR, 1.17 [95% C
171 f transition (intern only, resident only, or intern + resident) and compared with all other discharge
172  (intern-only: OR, 1.11 [95% CI, 1.02-1.21]; intern + resident: OR, 1.17 [95% CI, 1.02-1.34]).
173 on and internship and residency, housestaff, intern, resident, or physicians in training and by exami
174                 In total, 84% (91 of 108) of intern respondents agreed or strongly agreed with the us
175  were randomly assigned to either a standard intern schedule (extended duty overnight shifts of up to
176       Two physicians who were unaware of the interns' schedule assignments independently rated each i
177 ent with patients on the day of discharge by interns, senior residents, attending physicians, and nur
178 tilevel modeling assessed the association of intern, service, and calendar time with time spent at th
179 up to 30 hours; equivalent to 1200 overnight intern shifts at each site), or a protected sleep period
180 ork cell phone; equivalent to 1200 overnight intern shifts at each site).
181 al Education's new duty-hour standards limit interns' shifts to 16 hours and night float to 6 consecu
182 dy support previous evidence suggesting that interns spend only a small proportion of time with hospi
183 h the prevalence of depression among medical interns substantially exceeds that of the general popula
184  hours were associated with greater telomere intern telomere loss over the year (p = .002).
185            Compared with the previous year's interns, the nursing staff agreed or strongly agreed tha
186 edical student, to Pittsburgh as a pathology intern, then to La Jolla.
187  study uses data from a survey of US medical interns to assess the prevalence of self-reported disabi
188 ered in a few weeks, and strategies enabling interns to develop their own mental model of the researc
189 al digital assistant, random alerts prompted interns to rate fatigue on the 7-point Stanford Sleepine
190 dfulness curriculum randomized 340 pediatric interns to the intervention or control arm within progra
191                 The first cohort of surgical interns to train under the new regulations report decrea
192 asures of patient satisfaction, resident and intern (trainee) satisfaction, and patient care is unkno
193 owest noncompletion rate for women was among interns training at smaller academic programs (11%).
194                                      The six interns undergo intensive training within the first one
195  critically ill patients is required of most interns, undergraduate education in these skills remains
196           Individualized training of medical interns using a computer-controlled patient simulator is
197                                              Interns verbally omitted the most data, whereas medical
198 t, affording us a natural setting to compare intern vs. resident test ordering.
199 nal vs longitudinal studies, studies of only interns vs only upper-level residents, or studies of non
200 to the control teams; the average census per intern was 3.5 and 6.6 patients, respectively.
201                                          The intern was graded separately for the first 10 mins, and
202 on time for LapMentor trained versus control interns was 130 +/- 23 versus 184 +/- 43 seconds (P < 0.
203 tional survey of categorical general surgery interns was conducted between June and August 2007.
204      In this cohort study, the number of UIM interns was higher after the BCRP Diversity Council was
205                 We track the progress of the interns weekly through code review sessions and a final
206                  For 2 weeks of every month, interns were assigned to the nap schedule, which provide
207 ff agreed or strongly agreed that the cohort interns were better at patient assessment, collaboration
208                                          The interns were challenged with the scenario twice followin
209 t motivation and performance expectations of interns were compared with results achieved, and this da
210                                          The interns were debriefed extensively and given hands-on tr
211                                              Interns were detected for a mean (SD) of 722.8 (194.4) m
212                       In July 2011, surgical interns were prohibited from being on call from home by
213                            Nineteen surgical interns were randomized to training on the LapMentor lap
214                                              Interns were randomly assigned to 2 study groups (wCBT a
215                                       Twenty interns were studied during two three-week rotations in
216                                          All interns were tested in initial airway management skills
217  the rates of serious medical errors made by interns while they were working according to a tradition
218 We present the case of a 29-year-old medical intern who sustained a needlestick injury from a source
219                                   Among 1134 interns who completed the PC-PTSD-5 at month 12 of inter
220                                              Interns who matched in an affiliated medicine-pediatrics
221                                              Interns who matched in the BCRP from March 17, 2011, to
222                                        Among interns who screened positive for depression (PHQ-9 scor
223    The primary outcome was the proportion of interns who self-identified as UIM.
224                          Screening rates for interns (who performed best) were: cigarette use (89%),
225                                 Furthermore, interns with an elevated PHQ-9 score (>=10) demonstrated
226                                        Among interns with reported disability and need for accommodat
227                                         When interns with the nap schedule used coverage, they receiv
228  a competency-oriented curriculum to provide interns with the necessary knowledge and practical skill
229 ed work-related trauma exposure; among these interns with trauma exposure, 123 (19.0%) screened posit
230  with monthly Web-based survey assessment of intern work and sleep hours using a validated instrument
231 work shifts and reducing the number of hours interns work per week can reduce serious medical errors
232                                  On average, interns worked 19.5 hours per week less (P<0.001), slept
233 0%-62.9%) of 4327 intern-months during which interns worked exclusively in inpatient settings.
234                           In months in which interns worked five or more extended shifts, the risk th
235                                          All interns worked less than 80 hours per week during the in
236                              Seventeen of 20 interns worked more than 80 hours per week during the tr
237 yourself in some way") prior to the start of intern year and at 3-month intervals throughout the year
238 r percentage of women (57%) left after their intern year compared with men (22%).
239 itive depression screening result during the intern year had long-term implications for physicians, i
240  depressive symptoms among physicians before intern year vs during intern year.
241 stgraduate year of medical training (ie, the intern year).
242                          At the end of their intern year, participants completed a new survey with qu
243 mong physicians before intern year vs during intern year.
244 rating basic ophthalmology training into the intern year.

 
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