| Literature DB >> 28643560 |
Anna Anåker1,2, Ann Heylighen3, Susanna Nordin1,2, Marie Elf1,2,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We explored the concept of design quality in relation to healthcare environments. In addition, we present a taxonomy that illustrates the wide range of terms used in connection with design quality in healthcare.Entities:
Keywords: design quality; evidence-based design; healthcare architecture; hospital design and construction; physical environment
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28643560 PMCID: PMC5484461 DOI: 10.1177/1937586716679404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HERD ISSN: 1937-5867
Key Words Used in the Literature Search.
| All Words Related to Design | All Words Related to Physical Environment | All Words Related to Healthcare |
|---|---|---|
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Design quality Architectural design Design strategy Quality of design Design guidance Design standards Evidence-based design |
Physical environment Healthcare design Built environment Building design Hospital environment Hospital design and construction |
Healthcare sector Healthcare setting Hospital Health Healthcare buildings |
Figure 1.Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses flow diagram of the screening process of the literature.
Examples of Quotations from the Text, Codes, and Themes.
| Literature | Quotations | Codes | Themes |
|---|---|---|---|
| “the influence of building design quality on the people using it is irreducible from the social context of that environment” | Participation Social value |
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| “design categories e.g. building forms, scale, arrangement, volumes, corridors, acoustics” | Scale Usability |
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Note. PFI = private finance initiative.
General Characteristics of the Included Literature Organized in Descriptive Themes.
| Themes | Literature | Quotations From Literature |
|---|---|---|
| Environmental sustainability and ecological values Social and cultural interactions and values Resilience of engineering and building construction | “Eco-humanism in architecture is about having an equal concerns for human and ecological wellbeing” “A window wall creates an opportunity for patients to view the garden./---/ the sights of the garden can be brought indoors in the atrium or the winter garden.” “protecting the health of the surrounding community, protecting the health of the larger global community” “Ecological design is an art by which we aim to restore and maintain the wholeness of the entire fabric of life” “design should be a symbol of a culture of healing, health, caring, and compassion” “the influence of building design quality on the people using it is irreducible from the social context of that environment” “more human designs are important contributors to patient psychological and physical health” “to understand the social interactions of the projects stakeholders whilst they use the prescribed instruments” “the concerns about the quality of space and about a buildings relationship to its context and community have become stronger” “the design is definitely becoming, not less patient-centered. The concerns about a building's relationship to its context and community have become stronger” “so it is important to encourage the architects to incorporate these concerns in their projects, avoiding solving future problems with the addition of equipment or other solutions that increase energy consumption, water, or other resources” “the care delivery system must be resilient enough to prevent human errors or system failures to have an adverse impact on patient /---/effective, timely, efficient, and equitable” “design categories e.g building forms, scale, arrangement, volumes, corridors, acoustics” “Specific design qualities discussed include overall size, location of doors and privacy curtains, positioning of exam tables, influence of technology in the consultation area, types of seating, and placement of sink and hand sanitizing dispensers.” | |
| Overlapping Literature; Environmental Sustainability and Values, Social and Cultural Values, and Resilience of Engineering and Building Construction | ||
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The taxonomy of codes pertaining to design quality in the context of healthcare.
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A. ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY AND ECOLOGICAL VALUES Sustainability with community with surrounding community with global community Sustainable design green design green principles Eco-humanism equal concern for human and ecological wellbeing Environmental sustainability nature elements in architecture connection with nature Ecological design B. SOCIAL AND CULTURAL INTERACTIONS AND VALUES Accountability prevent human errors Connection communications to the user orientation Social responsibility and interactions patient perspective employee perspective participation Convenience flexibility satisfaction healing Social value respect dignity privacy humanization permissive interaction confidential Social and cultural supportive design stress reducing well-being positive distractions fitness beauty C. RESILIENCE OF ENGINEERING AND BUILDING CONSTRUCTION Security safety built and engineering laws Construction of the ward and/or hospital location of medical supplies air quality and ventilation quality of water non-slippery floor function of the materials enhanced efficiency of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning |
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Effective timely efficient equitable |
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Scale size forms, e.g., single-bed room space Usability ability to adapt to operational and technical changes ability to adapt with organizations utility Flexibility reduce the need for further improvements complexity supporting |