| Literature DB >> 33138934 |
Diana C Anderson1, Thomas Grey2, Sean Kennelly3, Desmond O'Neill3.
Abstract
Many nursing home design models can have a negative impact on older people and these flaws have been compounded by Coronavirus Disease 2019 and related infection control failures. This article proposes that there is now an urgent need to examine these architectural design models and provide alternative and holistic models that balance infection control and quality of life at multiple spatial scales in existing and proposed settings. Moreover, this article argues that there is a convergence on many fronts between these issues and that certain design models and approaches that improve quality of life, will also benefit infection control, support greater resilience, and in turn improve overall pandemic preparedness.Entities:
Keywords: Covid-19; Nursing home design; health care architecture; infection control; pandemic preparedness; quality of life; resilience
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33138934 PMCID: PMC7603995 DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2020.09.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Med Dir Assoc ISSN: 1525-8610 Impact factor: 4.669
Fig. 1Nursing home design and the macro, meso, and micro spatial scales.
Fig. 2Generic and hypothetical ground floor plan of a household model showing a unit with 11 single rooms with private bathrooms organized around a central communal area and access to a protected outdoor space.
Proposed Design Solutions for Nursing Home Design at Various Spatial Scales
| Spatial Scale | Design-Related Problems | Potential Design Solutions |
|---|---|---|
| MACRO (overall urban setting) | ||
| Proximity to home community | Isolation and undermining sense of self, connectedness, and resilience. | Strategic location and integration of nursing homes within existing communities. |
| Integration with health or social care | Disconnection from community health organizations and emergency services. | Strategic planning to integrate nursing homes with existing community services. |
| MESO (neighborhoods and districts) | ||
| Overall neighborhood factors, public realm | Disconnection from, or location within poor-quality neighborhood or public realm. | Age-attuned urbanism that creates walkable, safe, accessible, and attractive neighbors as the nursing home context. |
| Air quality | Poor community or neighborhood air quality. | Local policies to reduced traffic emissions, or improve air quality, the presence/planting of urban trees. |
| MICRO (site/building design) | ||
| Care model and overall building configuration | Large institutional settings that undermine quality of life and increase potential ingress of virus. | Small-scale homelike models that enhance well-being and reduce potential ingress of virus. |
| Access and internal circulation | Large settings with high-traffic levels, singular entrances/exits with high usage and contamination risk, lack of signage or information, lack of social distancing space in corridors. | Smaller settings with dedicated resident/visitor and staff access, contact free doors, generous circulation space and controlled traffic flow. |
| Key resident spaces | Shared rooms and bathrooms, poor-quality rooms, and lack of direct access to outside, infection-related restricted access to shared spaces and isolation. | High-quality single rooms with outdoor spaces, carefully managed shared spaces, provision for transitional spaces, safe walking areas, and access and views to outside. |
| Staff space | Consolidated spaces currently provided (ie, central locker room, centralized care stations). | Decentralized care stations, ability to subdivide staff spaces and provision for respite areas to support mental health. |
| Outdoor areas and spaces to exercise | Lack of access to outdoors and nature, and lack of outdoor exercise areas. | Provision of safe, secure, and easily observed/monitored outdoor space within easy access for all residents. |
| Air quality/ventilation | Poor ventilation and air quality. | Provision of high-quality natural and mechanical ventilation as required, carefully designed/maintained HVAC. |