Matthew Walker on health: what the evidence says · JRE #1109
“5 medical residents will make a serious medical error due to insufficient sleep one in 20 medical residents will kill a patient because of fatigue-related era raising it right now, you know, there are well over twenty thousand medical residents”
What the evidence says
Walker's figures trace back to research on sleep-deprived medical interns led by Christopher Landrigan and Laura Barger, most notably a 2006 nationwide web-based survey of 2,737 first-year residents (interns) published in PLoS Medicine. That study used a case-crossover design and measured relative risk: interns working five or more extended-duration (24+ hour) shifts per month had roughly 7.5 times higher odds of reporting a fatigue-related significant medical error compared to months without such shifts, and reported roughly 300% more fatigue-related preventable adverse events resulting in a patient death. These are self-reported, relative-risk figures from a specific cohort of first-year interns working extended shifts, not a validated absolute probability that generalizes to "1 in 5" or "1 in 20" of all residents, let alone the "over twenty thousand" residents Walker references, many of whom are not first-year interns or do not work extended-duration shifts. This data is consistently cited in sleep-medicine and duty-hour-reform literature as showing a real, substantial fatigue-related safety risk among sleep-deprived interns, but Walker's "1 in 5 will make an error / 1 in 20 will kill a patient" framing overstates the precision and generalizability of odds-ratio and survey data by presenting them as fixed individual-level probabilities. The core direction of the claim -- that resident fatigue meaningfully raises error and adverse-event risk -- is well-supported; the specific numeric framing as stated is misleading.