Resilient Hospital Design: From Crimean War to COVID-19.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Herd-Health Environments Research & Design Journal Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-05-10 DOI:10.1177/19375867231174238
Kangkang Tang, Bing Chen
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Objectives: Serious COVID-19 nosocomial infection has demonstrated a need to design our health services in a different manner. Triggered by the current crisis and the interest in rapid deployable hospital, this article discusses how hospital building layouts can be improved to streamline the patient pathways and thus to reduce the risk of hospital-related infections. Another objective of this work is to explore the possibility to develop flexible and scalable hospital building layouts through modular construction. This enables hospitals to better cope with different future demands and thereby enhance the resilience of the healthcare facilities.

Background: During the first wave of COVID-19, approximate one-seventh to one-fifth COVID-19 patients and majority of infected healthcare workers acquired the disease in NHS hospitals. Similar issues emerged during the Crimean War (1853-1856) when more soldiers died from infectious diseases rather than of battlefield casualties in Scutari Hospital. This led to an important collaborative work between Florence Nightingale, who looked into this problem statistically, and Isambard Kingdom Brunel, who designed the rapid deployment Renkioi Hospital which yielded a death rate 90% lower than that in Scutari Hospital. While contemporary medical research and practice have moved beyond Nightingale's concept of contagion, challenges of optimizing hospital building layouts to support healing and effectively combat nosocomial infections still pose elusive problems that require further investigation.

Methods: Through case study investigations, this article evaluates the risk of nosocomial infections of airborne transmissions under different building layouts, and this provides essential data for infection control in the new-build or refurbished healthcare projects.

Results: Improved hospital layout can be achieved through reconfiguration of rooms and concourse. Design interventions through evidence-based infection risk analysis can reduce congestion and provide extra separation and compartmentalization which will contribute the reduced nosocomial infection rate.

Conclusions: A resilient hospital shall be able to cope with unexpected circumstances and be flexible to change when new challenges arise, without compromising the safety and well-being of frontline medical staff and other patients. Such an organizational resilience depends on not only flexible clinical protocols but also flexible hospital building layouts. The latter allows hospitals to get better prepared for rapidly changing patient expectations, medical advances, and extreme weather events. The reconfigurability of an existing healthcare facility can be further enhanced through modular construction, standardization of building components, and additional space considered.

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韧性医院设计:从克里米亚战争到新冠肺炎。
目的:严重的新冠肺炎医院感染表明,需要以不同的方式设计我们的卫生服务。受当前危机和对快速部署医院的兴趣的触发,本文讨论了如何改进医院建筑布局,以简化患者通道,从而降低医院相关感染的风险。这项工作的另一个目标是探索通过模块化建设开发灵活和可扩展的医院建筑布局的可能性。这使医院能够更好地应对未来不同的需求,从而提高医疗机构的弹性。背景:在第一波新冠肺炎期间,大约七分之一至五分之一的新冠肺炎患者和大多数受感染的医护人员在NHS医院感染了这种疾病。克里米亚战争(1853-1856)期间也出现了类似的问题,当时斯库塔里医院死于传染病的士兵比死于战场伤亡的士兵多。这导致了Florence Nightingale和Isambard Kingdom Brunel之间的重要合作,前者对这一问题进行了统计研究,后者设计了快速部署的Renkioi医院,该医院的死亡率比Scutari医院低90%。尽管当代医学研究和实践已经超越了南丁格尔的传染病概念,但优化医院建筑布局以支持治疗和有效对抗医院感染的挑战仍然是难以捉摸的问题,需要进一步调查。方法:通过案例研究,评估不同建筑布局下空气传播的医院感染风险,为新建或翻新医疗项目的感染控制提供重要数据。结果:通过重新配置房间和大厅,可以改善医院的布局。通过循证感染风险分析设计干预措施可以减少拥挤,并提供额外的分离和划分,这将有助于降低医院感染率。结论:一家有韧性的医院应该能够应对意外情况,并在出现新挑战时灵活应对,而不会损害一线医护人员和其他患者的安全和福祉。这样的组织弹性不仅取决于灵活的临床协议,还取决于医院建筑布局的灵活性。后者使医院能够更好地为快速变化的患者期望、医疗进步和极端天气事件做好准备。通过模块化建设、建筑组件标准化和考虑额外空间,可以进一步增强现有医疗设施的可重构性。
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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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