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Sleep and Alertness in a Duty-Hour Flexibility Trial in Internal Medicine
Author(s) -
Mathias Basner,
David A. Asch,
Judy A. Shea,
Lisa M. Bellini,
Michele M. Carlin,
Adrian J. Ecker,
Susan Kohl Malone,
Sanjay V. Desai,
Jürgen Floege,
James Tonascia,
David Shade,
Joel T. Katz,
David W. Bates,
Orit EvenShoshan,
Jeffrey H. Silber,
Dylan S. Small,
Kevin G. Volpp,
Christopher G. Mott,
Sara Coats,
Daniel J. Mollicone,
David F. Dinges
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
new england journal of medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 19.889
H-Index - 1030
eISSN - 1533-4406
pISSN - 0028-4793
DOI - 10.1056/nejmoa1810641
Subject(s) - alertness , flexibility (engineering) , duty , sleep (system call) , medicine , sleep medicine , psychology , psychiatry , computer science , sleep disorder , insomnia , law , political science , economics , management , operating system
A purpose of duty-hour regulations is to reduce sleep deprivation in medical trainees, but their effects on sleep, sleepiness, and alertness are largely unknown.

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