Benchmarking Relevance for Hospital Design and Planning: An International Web-Based Survey

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Herd-Health Environments Research & Design Journal Pub Date : 2024-04-09 DOI:10.1177/19375867241239324
Hannah-Kathrin Silja Viergutz, Laura Cambra-Rufino, Michael Apple, Abigail Heithoff, Goran Lindahl, Stefano Capolongo, Andrea Brambilla
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Abstract

Objective:The study aims to investigate what design practitioners and healthcare facility managers deem as important benchmarking metrics worldwide, investigating country differences in benchmarking usage and which metrics are prioritized.Background:Benchmarking is a regular practice in the healthcare sector, both for clinical and managerial aspects to compare, measure, and improve standardized processes. However, limited knowledge is available about benchmarking procedures in hospital planning, design, and construction.Methods:A web-based survey was designed, revised, and pilot-tested in five countries; it was adjusted according to local experts’ suggestions and submitted globally via SoSci multilingual platform to persons involved in hospital design, research, construction, and facility management. It was composed of closed questions on 5-point Likert-type scale ranking frequency or importance and open-ended questions divided into six sections. Two hundred and eighty full responses have been collected. Statistical analysis was performed via PowerBI and R-Studio, while qualitative analysis was performed via MAXQDA.Results:The findings reported allow for both specific insights per each country or category as well as enabling general considerations of a practice that is becoming always more international with 30%–50% of respondents working in the international context. The evaluation of the survey highlights the most important benchmarks, among others. For example, for respondents from the top five countries (Sweden, Spain, Germany, Italy, and the United States), the most important metric for benchmark comparability is whether the project was new construction, new construction attached to an existing hospital, or interior renovation. Construction date, client type (public vs. private), and country of location were also generally rated as the most important metrics by respondents. Other metrics that were consistently rated as important globally included inpatient unit layout, walking distances, number of floors, and whether all patient rooms are private. Space-related metrics are considered very important elements in the design and planning of healthcare facilities worldwide. Regarding cost-related metrics, all countries consider the ratio construction cost per building gross area as the most important.Conclusions:Benchmarking emerges as a relevant tool for hospital design and planning as it can support efficiency, standardization, and confidence; currently, benchmarking is still underutilized due to the challenge of international comparison, access to data outside each specific company, and variation design metrics nationally. Benchmarking strategies should be further investigated to support knowledge exchange and to ensure reliable and comparable information globally.
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医院设计与规划的基准相关性:基于网络的国际调查
目的:本研究旨在调查世界各地的设计从业人员和医疗设施管理者认为哪些是重要的基准指标,调查各国在基准使用方面的差异以及哪些指标是优先考虑的。方法:我们在五个国家设计、修订并试点测试了基于网络的调查问卷,并根据当地专家的建议进行了调整,然后通过 SoSci 多语种平台向全球医院设计、研究、建设和设施管理的相关人员提交了调查问卷。该问卷由封闭式问题和开放式问题组成,封闭式问题采用 5 点李克特量表,对频率或重要性进行排序,开放式问题分为六个部分。共收集到 280 份完整的答复。通过 PowerBI 和 R-Studio 进行了统计分析,通过 MAXQDA 进行了定性分析。结果:所报告的调查结果既有助于深入了解每个国家或类别的具体情况,也有助于对日益国际化的实践进行总体考虑,30%-50% 的受访者在国际环境中工作。调查评估强调了最重要的基准等。例如,对于来自前五个国家(瑞典、西班牙、德国、意大利和美国)的受访者来说,基准可比性的最重要指标是项目是新建项目、附属于现有医院的新建项目还是内部翻新项目。受访者普遍认为,施工日期、客户类型(公立与私立)和所在国家也是最重要的指标。其他在全球范围内被一致评为重要的指标包括住院部布局、步行距离、楼层数以及是否所有病房都是私密的。与空间相关的指标被认为是全球医疗设施设计和规划中非常重要的因素。在与成本相关的指标方面,所有国家都认为每建筑总面积的建筑成本比率是最重要的。结论:标杆管理是医院设计和规划的一个重要工具,因为它可以提高效率、标准化和可信度;目前,标杆管理仍未得到充分利用,原因是难以进行国际比较、难以获得特定公司以外的数据以及各国的设计指标存在差异。应进一步研究基准战略,以支持知识交流,确保全球范围内的信息可靠且具有可比性。
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来源期刊
Herd-Health Environments Research & Design Journal
Herd-Health Environments Research & Design Journal PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
22.70%
发文量
82
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