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A shorter daily shift schedule for endoscopists, the physicians who perform colonoscopies, avoids a decrease in the polyp detection rate as the day progresses, research from Mayo Clinic indicates. The findings, which have implications for endoscopist scheduling, were presented by Mayo Clinic investigators today at Digestive Disease Week 2010, the annual meeting of the American Gastroenterological Association. Data from 3,846 colonoscopies performed at Mayo Clinic during 2008 were examined in the study. After excluding factors known to influence polyp detection, such as poor bowel preparation and involvement of fellows in training in the procedures, researchers compared polyp detection rates by daily shifts. Some people develop colon cancer even after having colonoscopies, says Gregory Munson, M.D., M.P.H., a gastroenterology fellow at Mayo Clinic and study co-author. Polyp miss rates are partially to blame, so we want to discover how to make the quality of the colonoscopy exam better." Mayo Clinic schedules outpatient colonoscopies during three 3 hour shifts each weekday (a morning shift, 7:30 to 10:30 a.m.; a midday shift, 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.; and an afternoon shift, 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.). Researchers found the morning shift polyp detection rate was 39.1 percent, midday was 44.6 percent and afternoon was 38.9 percent. The average time a colon was examined during scope withdrawal remained constant throughout the day at just over eight minutes, with only a five-second variation between the shifts with the longest and shortest average times, Dr. Munson says. Our endoscopists usually work only one three-hour shift per day rather than a half or full day of endoscopy, says Dawn Francis, M.D., M.H.S., a gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic and lead researcher. With shorter shifts throughout the day, we dont see the drop in polyp detection rate later in the day that has previously been reported. Other health care facilities might also want to consider a model that breaks up the day into three-hour shifts. In this video, Dr. Munson discusses the study and it's findings.