| Literature DB >> 34244726 |
Elke Miedema1, Göran Lindahl2, Marie Elf3.
Abstract
The Health Promoting Hospitals (HPH) networks, founded by the World Health Organisation, support the introduction of health promotion in healthcare. This development involves the creation of a health promoting built environment. However, few studies have explored the HPH in relation to the built environments, and it is unclear how HPH-networks incorporate the built environment in their work. The study therefore examined the Swedish HPH-Network in relation to the built environment. The mixed-method study included data from (i) key online material from the Swedish network, (ii) a survey with open-ended questions of representatives of the networks' workgroups and (iii) semi-structured interviews with the built environment workgroup. The study showed that the built environment is unevenly and incoherently incorporated in the network. Moreover, there is more attention for healing and healthy rather than health-promotive strategies, indicating a knowledge gap. Descriptions of the health promoting built environment are diverse, and address design features, design strategies or indicate places for health promotion interventions. The descriptions of the built environment are combined with various HPH goals and population groups. To utilize the built environment as a resource for HPHs, the networks should consider incorporating the built environment in documents and action plans at all organizational levels.Entities:
Keywords: built environment; health promoting environments; health-promoting hospitals; healthcare facilities; salutogenesis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34244726 PMCID: PMC8851404 DOI: 10.1093/heapro/daab101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Promot Int ISSN: 0957-4824 Impact factor: 2.483
Overview of the main categories, subcategories and case examples of the built environment
| Category | Subcategory | Case example |
|---|---|---|
| Terms being used to describe the built environment | Built environment | The built environment can support health promotion by; colours, light, entrance design and increasing the privacy by improving the acoustic situation. |
| Building design | To create good architecture, you need to combine research-based knowledge with the field of care, local issues, location, organization, technology, care process, treatments, patient perspective, staff interests. | |
| Environment | Patient’s health can be improved by different aesthetic and environmental elements in the caring surroundings. | |
| Specific health-promotive environments | The hospital site | Not long ago, we made a parking lot at the hospital site; from the beginning, it was supposed to be a green area. |
| The hospital building | I think the first time you go [to the hospital], it should make you feel it will be good and easy to find the way. | |
| Patient rooms | Single-patient room helps reduce airborne and contact-related infections. | |
| Staff support spaces | Decentralization of workstations and placement of clean/dirty storage in direct connection with patient rooms to reduce walking and retrieval time, thereby increasing time for direct care activities. | |
| Healthcare spaces | Introducing positive, inspiring, and restorative themes of beautiful nature into the ward environment is related to reduced experience of stress by patients and staff. | |
| Supportive spaces | An inviting waiting room environment with (health) information, self-care and control. | |
| Circulation spaces | A design that enables good visibility of patients from corridors and workstations helps reduce falls. | |
| Furniture | The main basics (..) Are to have clean, nice-looking furniture without old coffee cups, damaged old newspapers, or (..) Things like that around. | |
| Design strategies for HPH built environments | Working together | Many small interventions that together make a bigger whole. |
| Incorporating research | Evidence-based design [works] on two levels: as a scientific fact base for informed design decisions and as a process to clarify decision making in the design process. Design decisions are documented, which can also support future performance measures. | |
| User-centred perspectives | Include the patient as well as the professional perspective. | |
| Priorities in design process | Health promotion perspectives may come after the initial planning stage of hospital building. | |
| Design features for HPH built environment | Ambient aspects | The staff storage in the intensive care unit has silent locks to improve sleep at night. |
| Architectural aspects | Decentralization of workstations. | |
| Interior aspects | Introducing positive, inspiring, and restorative themes of beautiful nature into the ward environment. | |
| Social aspects | To understand the healthcare context, including the audience of the artwork, the artist should spend much time with the architect and staff working there. | |
| Maintenance aspects | (…) We talked about more sustainability in the hospital area; we talked about ponds where [rain] water can be collected (..) [which can be used to] water the plants. | |
| health promoting perspectives | Quality of healthcare | Attractive, appealing, or comfortable rooms increase patients’ perceived quality of care and satisfaction. |
| Health protection | Single-family rooms designed to promote family presence can help reduce the number of falls. | |
| Prevention | A work environment with a stressful atmosphere affects both patients’ healing as well as staff working conditions negatively. | |
| Empowerment | [The waiting room] should be a stimulating environment but also one where you can go through literature or the web so you can be active when you are waiting there and can get more knowledge about your disease or about problems. | |
| Target populations described | Patients | Patients’ health can be improved by different aesthetic and environmental elements in the caring surroundings. |
| Staff | Creating good working environments, including conditions for person-centred meetings, even between employees. | |
| Other building users | Patients, staff and visitors declared that beautiful nature is valuable and healing and can give calmness and hope. | |
| The community | Raise awareness of the (physical) environmental impact of the hospital on the health of patients, staff and the community; the healing process should be supported, maintained and improved the healing process. |