Invisible work
Residents often take on tasks that compensate for operational shortfalls: they cover understaffing, bottlenecks, red tape and lack of operational data.
Daily work often depends on informal tasks: calls, tracking results, transport, form filling, retranscription and overtime.
In short: When residents' informal tasks keep the ward functioning, the system hides understaffing, red tape and a lack of clear processes.
The volume of the department should not be supported by replacing training with operational work
In large hospitals, high activity is normal. But the department's performance must be sustained by good tenure, organization, support staff and processes — not by turning residents into a permanent operational reserve.
Deficit or unequal involvement does not justify role substitution
We know that many hospitals are undersized and that the staff involved frequently take on additional volume. That is precisely why it is necessary to measure what part of the lack, disorganization or unequal distribution of work is covered by residents, so that the real problem is not hidden under the idea that "this is how you learn".
Substitution becomes culture
When residents spend years doing the work of other roles, the system can delay necessary corrections: informal functioning becomes the norm. Then the same logic is passed on, and each generation is pushed to accept what the previous one accepted.
What needs to be changed
The role of the resident must be clearly delimited from administrative or logistical tasks that do not serve the training. What is formative medical act, what is administrative work, what is staff coverage and what is operational improvisation without clear educational value must be measured separately.
The simple test
The question is not just whether the ward can function without residents, but how much it gets used to informally transferring tasks to residents. Even if a ward could function without residents, their presence can hide organizational, staffing and engagement issues. The problem is not that the residents help; the problem is when aid becomes the convenient mechanism by which hiring, redistribution of labor, assumed on-call shifts and better administrative processes are postponed.
Five mechanisms by which the burden reaches the resident
A. Substitution of personnel
When registrars, porters, nurses, assistants or administrative staff are absent, the resident takes on non-medical duties and loses training time.
B. Flow failure
Crowded UPU, blocked beds, delayed transfers, hard-to-reach investigations and inter-ward blockages turn the resident into a dispatcher without authority.
C. Shifting risk
The resident may bear the conflict with the family, the perceived medico-legal risk, and the consequences of systemic decisions, although they do not control the resources.
D. Intrainingal failure
Without dashboards, interoperability and real-time data, the resident manually reconstructs the history, available places, results and consultations.
E. Training erosion
When operational pressure dominates the schedule, educational time becomes residual after on-call shifts, sheets, phones and improvisations.
F. Human cost
In the end, fatigue, cynicism, leaving, fear of reporting and the feeling that the resident is being used as an expendable piece appear.
Areas to measure
- Actual hours and shifts per month, including post-call work.
- Time on paperwork, phones, logistics and non-clinical tasks.
- UPU/bed/transfer: time from decision to bed, number of calls, refusals, delays.
- Investigations: time wasted with appointments, results, specimen/patient transport.
- Supervision: how long the senior is actually available and when feedback occurs.
- Missed training: courses, procedures, rotations, operations, simulation, study.
Personal time becomes a buffer zone
When the hospital does not have enough administrative, digital and operational resources, the difference is often made up of the resident's time: after-call, after-hours, on weekends, during recovery, study and personal life.
Anonymous index of the invisible work of residents
The proposal: an anonymous index that measures how much of the hospital's operation is informally transferred to residents. Not as an accusation, but as a system diagnosis: what features are missing, who covers them, and at what cost to training, sleep, and safety.