Short-Term Effects of Workstyle Reform for Japanese Doctors on Their Surgical Productivity
Yoshinori Nakata, Yuichi Watanabe, Akihiko Ozaki

TL;DR
This study found that a workstyle reform aimed at improving Japanese doctors' health did not significantly boost surgical productivity in the short term.
Contribution
The novel application of the Malmquist Index model to assess surgical productivity changes after workstyle reform in Japan.
Findings
No significant change in surgical productivity was observed between 2023 and 2024.
Neither the catch-up nor frontier-shift effects showed significant deviations from zero.
Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the workstyle reform, aimed at improving physician health and safety, achieved a secondary goal of enhancing surgical productivity by applying the Malmquist Index (MI) model. We hypothesized that the reform would lead to a significant improvement in surgical total factor productivity in the short term. Methods: We conducted a retrospective observational study at a university hospital, analyzing 1,557 surgical procedures performed by 72 surgeons from April 1 through May 31 in 2023 and 2024. A non-radial, non-oriented MI model was applied under variable returns-to-scale assumptions. Each decision-making unit (DMU) was defined as the most senior-ranking surgeon for a given procedure. Inputs included (1) the number of assisting physicians and (2) the duration of surgery from skin incision to closure. The output was defined as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory of Medicine Studies · Surgical Simulation and Training · Dental Education, Practice, Research
