Neurosurgeon, who once did 100 hours, relies on sleeping pills
Public doctors are complaining about long working hours. But exactly how long is long? A hundred hours a week?
That is what Dr Peter Pang Ka-hung, a neurosurgeon at Kwong Wah Hospital in Yau Ma Tei, once clocked up.
Pang, who has relied on sleeping pills in the past several years to get enough rest, does about 10 to 15 on-call duties a month after his normal work hours, which are from 9am to 5pm.
When he is on call, he has to answer inquiries from junior doctors, check patients' brain images from his home computer and sometimes rush back to hospital to do an emergency operation.
'Usually I get two to three calls from junior doctors every night while I am on call,' he said. 'I need to wake up and check the patients' scanned images on a computer and give instructions. It takes 30 minutes to an hour per case.'
Five years after graduating from medical school in 1992, Pang was promoted to senior medical officer and has been in the same post for 13 years.
While senior doctors in most other specialties do not need to take frequent on-call duties, neurosurgeons are different because of the specialty's high-risk nature.