Do intraoperative microbreaks with exercises improve mental focus and physical performance and reduce discomfort in attending surgeons?
56 attending surgeons from 4 Medical Centers
Intraoperative microbreaks with exercises performed in the sterile field
A day of regular surgeries without microbreaks (first day of the non-crossover design)
Self-reported mental focus and physical performancepatient reported
Intraoperative microbreaks with exercises are well-received by surgeons and may mitigate work-related musculoskeletal fatigue and pain without significantly increasing surgery duration.
Recent literature has demonstrated ergonomic risk to surgeons in the operating room. One method used in other industries to mitigate these ergonomic risks is the incorporation of microbreaks. Thus, intraoperative microbreaks with exercises in a non-crossover design were studied. Fifty-six attending surgeons from 4 Medical Centers volunteered first in a day of their regular surgeries and then second day where there were microbreaks with exercises that could be performed in the sterile field, answering questions after each case, without significantly increasing the duration of their surgeries. Surgeons self-reported improvement or no change in their mental focus (88%) and physical performance (100%) for the surgical day incorporating microbreaks with exercises. Discomfort in the shoulders was significantly reduced while distractions and flow impact was minimal. Eighty-seven percent of the surgeons wanted to incorporate the microbreaks with exercises into their OR routine. Intraoperative microbreaks with exercises may be a way to mitigate work-related musculoskeletal fatigue, pain and injury.
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M. Susan Hallbeck
Mayo Clinic
Bethany R. Lowndes
Nebraska Medical Center
Juliane Bingener
Mayo Clinic
Applied Ergonomics
Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Mayo Clinic in Arizona
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Hallbeck et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d7fcf311d83f35e5ae386f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apergo.2016.12.006