The prevalence of sleep deprivation and its impact among medical officers in a tertiary hospital, a cross-sectional study from Malaysia

Author:

Daher Aqil M.ORCID,Burud Ismail,Subair Mehrdad,Mushahar Lily,Xin Law Jia

Abstract

Sleep deprivation (SD), defined as an inability to get a minimum of 7 hours of regular sleep at night is a serious health problem that impacts the performance of medical professionals. This study aims to determine the impact of sleep deprivation on perceived performance among medical officers (MOs). A cross-sectional study design involved 231 MOs from six disciplines in Hospital Tuanku Ja’afar, a tertiary center in the south of Malaysia. A self-administered questionnaire was introduced in the English language. The questionnaire involved the sociodemographic characteristics; job-related factors, and the Sleep Deprivation Impact Scale (SDIS). The SDIS is a 12-question scale, rated on a 5-point Likert scale from strongly disagree to strongly agree. A higher SDIS score reflected a higher impact of sleep deprivation. A total of 206 MOs returned the completed questionnaire yielding a response rate of 89.17%. The mean age of respondents was 31.68 (±3.49) years. Most of the respondents were female, of Malay ethnicity, and married. More than three-quarters (78.64%) reported sleep deprivation. Being less effective in communication and formulating diagnosis (3 (1.01) vs 2.5 (1.15),p = 0.005); taking longer time to do things (3.44 (1.07) vs 2.8 (1.34),p = 0.001); and feeling unsafe while driving (3.56 (1.25) vs 2.93 (1.55),p = 0.006) manifested significantly higher mean among sleep-deprived respondents. In conclusion, sleep deprivation is a prevalent problem; that adversely affects crucial functioning domains that may endanger patients and healthcare providers alike. Radical countermeasures are required to ensure satisfactory sleep duration and address areas jeopardizing MO safety.

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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