TL;DR
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A famous study found a ~10% spike in fatal medication errors in July in counties with teaching hospitals—likely linked to new residents. That was med errors, not overall surgical deaths. PMC+2PubMed+2
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For surgery, the best evidence overall shows no meaningful July bump in mortality or major complications across specialties. PMC+1
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What seems to matter more today is the “weekend effect”: operations right before a weekend (e.g., Friday) show a small but significant increase in complications and mortality versus early-week cases. JAMA Network+1
What the research actually says
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2010 JGIM analysis: Fatal medication errors were 10% higher in July in areas with teaching hospitals; no July spike where there were no teaching hospitals. This wasn’t about technical surgical errors. PMC
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Systematic reviews/meta-analyses: A 2011 Annals review saw some changeover-related harms, but a later 30-year synthesis (113 studies) found no July effect on surgical mortality or major morbidity overall. PubMed+1
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Recent large cohort (2025, JAMA Network Open): Surgeries immediately before the weekend had higher odds of death/complications/readmission compared with those after the weekend (absolute effect modest). JAMA Network
Practical takeaways (for elective procedures)
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Don’t panic about “July,” but double-check medication lists and reconciliation if you’re in a teaching hospital.
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If you can choose, schedule early in the week so immediate postop care doesn’t land on a weekend. JAMA Network
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Ask how your case will be supervised (attending involvement, rounding coverage), which matters more than the calendar month.