Hospital Planning: How will Hospitals design future Healthcare Spaces after the pandemic?

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Around the world, national healthcare emergency plans have struggled to cope with the force of Covid-19, with healthcare facilities and critical care systems buckling under extraordinary pressure. Faced with a massive inrush of long-term intensive care patients, overstretched hospitals have often had to rely on medical evacuations organized by regional health agencies and even the army. In a growing number of countries, this is leading to a complete rethink concerning the way hospitals are designed. 

Flexibility is now the most valuable ingredient of healthcare buildings. Even before COVID, there was a growing realization that buildings of every kind needed to be more flexible, as technological change far outpaces the development cycle. The pandemic has added powerfully to the case for flexibility – intruding operations in every part of the built environment and promising to disrupt markets for many years to come.

In this article, we have specified the top ten areas where we see change coming.

1. Improving Infection Prevention

The hospital’s infection control/prevention unit is going to become a much louder voice in many design meetings going forward. There will be increased demand to make design features more easily cleaned and use surfaces that withstand harsh chemicals. More health systems will use UV light or disinfecting mists in high- and medium-risk areas. Low-risk areas like exam rooms will need more thorough cleaning rules and room turnover processes. All this needs to be done without losing the warmth and hospitality of today’s healthcare designs.

2. Increasing isolation room capacity

The biggest transformation most facilities have undertaken during the pandemic is expanding the number of isolation rooms. Going forward, hospitals will need collections of rooms and entire units and wings that can be negatively pressurized and cut off from the rest of the hospital in a pandemic. These units will need easy ways to get patients in from the ED, as well as trash out, without going through the entire hospital premises. While antechambers are not required in the Facility Guidelines Institute’s guidance, design teams will still need to address how staff can remove PPE without corrupting the hallway outside isolated patient care areas.

3. Limiting shared staff spaces. 

Many of the assumptions that we have used earlier in designing staff spaces may need to be reconsidered, including the size and division of workstations within a staff workspace, the number of people in an office, and the number of people sharing each workstation. Large, shared break rooms and locker rooms may be excluded in favor of smaller, more discrete spaces. Additionally, administrative departments may be relocated off-site, or work-from-home arrangements may be devised to lessen the staff on campus. The numbers of students and merchants onsite at a given time may be limited, too.

4. Patients must be  triaged by paramedics before they enter the ED. 

The predominance of tents outside of EDs during this crisis, and their susceptibility to weather events, points to a need to help our clients re-envision the triage and intake process. We need alternatives to triage people before they walk in the front door, including tele-triage, apps, and multiple entries and waiting solutions, based upon medical needs. Overflow facilities that are external to the hospital need to be resolute, durable, and quickly erected, with utility connections planned for and already in place.

5. Re-imagining waiting rooms and public spaces. 

Nobody liked the waiting room earlier, but now it seems unimaginable that people will be willing to sit next to possibly infectious strangers while they wait for an appointment or a loved one’s procedure. Trends like self-check-in and self-rooming will accelerate to reduce interactions with other people. Patients and families will be prompted to wait outside or in their car. All public spaces including waiting rooms, lobbies, and dining facilities will have to be carefully planned, structured, and designed to create a greater physical separation between people, with appropriate queuing.

6. Planning for inpatient surge capacity. 

The design of the healthcare organization must be such that it can easily accommodate double or triple the number of patients. The hospital planning team must rethink how they can convert surgical prep and PACU into overflow ICUs. They need to explore through every building system (HVAC, E-power, med gas, etc.) to make sure that the design should be such that the services to these units can meet the vastly increased patient and equipment load.

7. Finding surge capacity in outpatient centers.

The continued growth in mobile or ambulatory care will resume as soon as our current crisis passes. Because many of these facilities are often owned by healthcare systems and already have emergency power or limited medical gasses, they have the potential to provide faster flood capacity, with fewer disruptions, than the field hospitals being erected in hotels and convention centers. As we develop outpatient clinics, freestanding EDs, and ambulatory surgery centers, we need to consider the infrastructure that is necessary for these facilities to support sicker patients during the next pandemic.

8. Inventories for greater supply chain control. 

Hospitals and health systems are looking for greater control of their supply chain and will likely stockpile key supplies, equipment, and medication to avoid future supply shortages. They may develop acquisition agreements with third-party supply and equipment vendors for stockpiles they cannot afford to maintain on their own and will expect greater support from their group purchasing organizations. Some stockpiles may be at individual hospitals, while larger systems may maintain supplies regionally or nationally. We will need to design facilities to house these inventories as well as systems to maintain, refresh, and replenish them.

9. Telemedicine’s impact on facility sizes.

Many service lines will likely need smaller outpatient centers in the future as telemedicine reduces the need for exam rooms, waiting rooms, and support spaces. Telemedicine has flourished throughout this crisis, allowing clinicians to perform routine check-ups and triage with patients without putting either doctor or patient at risk. While the future reimbursement for telemedicine is unclear, the impact on these designs will be enormous. The technology is relatively cheap, physicians can see more patients in the same amount of time, and there are virtually no space requirements. 

10. Isolation operating rooms and cath labs. 

Setting up key spaces that allow for social distancing in design will be predominant. Healthcare entrances will need to consider queuing in line with social distancing and biometric temperature screening requirements. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines on how to operate on an infectious patient require that the operating room remain positively pressurized, that it stays sealed throughout the surgery, and that no activity takes place within the room for an extended time after intubation and extubation. While important, these processes greatly extend the length of surgical cases and limit staff mobility in and out of the room before, during, and after cases. To function more effectively and efficiently, many more hospitals will want ORs and cath labs with the proper airflow and design to protect the patient from surgical infection while protecting the staff in the room and the surrounding facility from the patient. This will need the addition of pressurized anterooms from the OR to both the hallway and the surgical core or control room, careful balancing of HVAC systems, and modeling of airflow within the lab or the operating room itself to ensure that potentially contaminated air is drawn away from the staff to minimize the risk of infection.

Conclusion: 

Healthcare planners, architects, and designers must take a leading role in creating safer healthcare spaces in a post-COVID-19 world. Executing these types of innovative strategies along with the recommendations of distancing and avoiding contact will let patients receive care in safer spaces.

Unlike most healthcare design trends that develop over several years, these changes have already become essential in just a few short weeks, as hospitals and health systems are forced to figure out how to take emergency changes with limited supplies and resources. In the coming years, healthcare organizations will need to adjust their operations for future pandemics, codes will need to be rewritten to safely meet these new situations, and government grants will be necessary to promote hospitals to make these changes permanent.

The healthcare design industry has a responsibility now to help reimagine the future of healthcare design to best lodge these new operational realities.

Waiting Rooms In Hospitals: Improving The Quality Of Life Of Patients

The waiting rooms of an oncology hospital are very special places. During the treatment process against the disease, which can be very long, these spaces become the routine environment of patients. Patients who usually face long waits and moments of high emotional load and stress.

History and classic concept of waiting rooms in hospitals

In recent times, efforts are being made to improve patient care and patient satisfaction scores. What’s more, patient-centred care is becoming increasingly fashionable. Yet surveys continue to show that waiting rooms are a deciding factor in patient satisfaction.

It is a fact that waiting rooms have been a stagnant concept until a few years ago that has not evolved much since its inception. The main improvements have come from the hand of technology, with informative screens.

For the rest, the main changes have been purely aesthetic, changing the furniture, lighting or some aspects of the decoration; without stopping to make other types of changes that result in a greater humanization of the experience.

And the only certain thing is that thousands of cancer patients spend hours in waiting rooms every day.

Aesthetics are important, but at Astron Healthcare, their hospital designers & planners believe it is time to reflect deeply and re-examine the purpose of waiting rooms. What is its functionality? How can we make them as pleasant places as possible for patients?

Why are cancer waiting rooms so important?

The waiting room is usually the first contact the patient has with medical oncology and radiation oncology services. This is where any support strategy, both psychological and emotional, should begin.

Although most people may think that a waiting room is a place of little importance, the truth is that it is a space that can radically change people’s lives. However, in it we will spend some of the most distressing and stressful moments of our lives.

Next, we leave you with some relevant data about these spaces, which allow us to get a good idea of ​​their importance.

Patients typically spend an average of 8 weeks in oncology waiting rooms.

Various studies indicate that the average consultation time is just over 9 minutes. However, the waiting time can be as long as 5 or 6 hours.

Almost all patients agree that waiting times are endless, something that has a very negative influence on their moods.

Without a doubt, oncology waiting rooms represent a delicate environment that requires a rethinking of the way of understanding space, as well as a new methodology to care for patients.

There is scientific evidence that shows the influence of architecture on people’s health. For example, a study published in the 1980s in the journal Science showed that patients who had views of green surroundings from their hospital room spent less time in hospital and needed fewer pain relievers.

This direct relationship between the hospital space planning design and the results obtained highlights not only the potential that architectural design has in the recovery of patients, but also the economic repercussions it entails for healthcare institutions.

8 Tips For Better Hospital Construction

The health system has evolved over time, this means that medical centers must make some modifications in the construction of hospitals that allow them to adapt to current needs.

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It must be taken into account that the construction of hospitals must focus on the interests of the people, ensuring their well-being; for both patients and staff.

Healthcare architecture firms in India must encompass all areas intended for the treatment, diagnosis, control of patients, such as operating rooms, doctor’s offices, emergency rooms, among others.

To carry out a construction of hospitals that guarantees greater productivity and efficiency, it is necessary to take into account the following:

8 tips for better hospital construction

  1. Get the job done

Before starting the construction procedures, it is necessary to study all the steps that will be carried out.

When building hospitals, it is important to have strict control over all the elements that include this work. From the suppliers, the construction company and the materials with which they are going to work.

It is important to hire healthcare management consulting in India to handle the hospital construction experience. This is one way of ensuring the expected result. It is also necessary to have high quality material.

  1. Outpatients

The experiences of patients greatly influence the efficiency and care provided by medical centers. Currently, outpatient procedures are the most required by these people.For the construction of hospitals, it is important to include spaces destined to meet this demand, this is an alternative to increase the income of the medical center, and optimize the areas.

  1. Do interviews

To guarantee efficient results, it is necessary that you carry out interviews with everyone who uses the hospital daily, this is a way of knowing which are the main problems and needs that arise in these facilities.

The most appropriate people to participate in the interviews should cover various areas of the hospital, such as the administrative department, the medical and nursing department, and the owners, managers of the medical center and hospital consulting companies in India.

  1. The user counts

When building hospitals, you should not forget about users. For this, it is important to work alongside the builder, this being an intelligent way to achieve a working connection with it, and achieve your expectations.It is important that hospital construction managers, such as engineers and architects, have experience in this work.

Clear and continuous communication by owners and engineers is also necessary, this being the only way to guarantee good results in hospital construction.

  1. Privacy

Privacy is a priority in hospital construction. She is considered one of the key elements in the success of medical centers, this is because it ensures greater comfort for patients.

Privacy has to be one of the goals to achieve during this procedure. It is a way to increase patient compliance with hospital facilities.

Currently, people are looking for spaces that, in addition to guaranteeing good results and improved care, ensuring strict privacy, this will be possible through the designs presented by these institutions.

  1. Phased building

It’s okay to work out the building in phases.This is an efficient way to ensure considerable savings over the costs of hospital construction. However, this has the disadvantage of increasing the processing time.

It is necessary to start working directly with your financial adviser, the executive team, hospital management consultancy in India and the board of the medical staff, with the requirement that everyone agrees to carry out the construction of hospitals in phase.

  1. Personnel planning

The design of the location of the departments that occupy the hospital influences a large percentage with its productivity. Performing proper hospital space planning design maximizes staff flow and efficiency.

  1. Expansibility

The health area is constantly evolving, which is why the future of medical care is considered to be unpredictable.

The technological advances in medical equipment, treatments and studies are perfected over time, this is an element that must be considered during the construction of hospitals.

Creating ideal spaces to allow these studies to continue, as research laboratories is one of the ways to allow the expandability of hospital construction.