Healing Environment PDF
Healing Environment PDF
Healing Environment PDF
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What is a healing environment?
What makes a healing environment? Noise control
the outdoor world, promoting family involvement, increasing Hospitals are noisy places with numerous sources of noise,
the opportunity for patient control, promoting accessibility and historically they have been designed with sound-
and way-finding, improving safety, improving communication, reflecting surfaces that worsen acoustic conditions and
maximising potential time with patients and providing a enable noises to echo and propagate over large areas.
welcoming environment (3). Studies have found that reduced noise levels e.g. by using
noise-reducing finishes such as high-performance sound
By using Evidence Based Design (EBD) absorbing ceiling tiles, improve sleep, reduce annoyance,
principles to help create a healing environment, improve satisfaction, reduce pain and the use of pain
the experiences of patients, their families medications, decrease psychological and physiological stress,
and staff can all be enhanced – infections and decrease emotional exhaustion, reduce headaches, improve
medical errors can be reduced, and patient communication, reduce medical errors, decrease heart and
respiratory rate, decrease blood pressure, shorten recovery
outcomes (such as reduced pain and stress,
time and hospital stays, and reduce re-hospitalisation (6 - 12).
sleep, privacy, and recovery times) can all be
improved.
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What is a healing environment?
Natural light Connection to nature
There is no doubt that people prefer daylight to electric Contact with nature can have beneficial health effects (3, 17).
lighting as their primary source of illumination (2). Various This was first demonstrated by Ulrich in 1984 with his
studies around the world have consistently shown that the pioneering study described earlier (4). Ulrich’s findings are
majority of survey respondents prefer to work and live in supported by a Swedish study which demonstrated that
buildings illuminated by daylight (2, 13-15). People not only patients who had a view of vegetation from their beds had
prefer daylight because it is more pleasant than electric shorter convalescences, fewer complications and took less
light, they also tend to believe that daylight is beneficial for pain-killing or sleep-inducing medications. Normal blood
personal health (2). A study carried out in 1996 among 174 pressure was also more prevalent in the experimental group
patients with severe depression found that patients in sunny than in the control group (3).
rooms had a 2.6 day shorter stay than patients in dull rooms
for example (2, 16). Conclusion
Conventional healthcare facilities are rarely therapeutic and
Patients in sunny rooms had a 2.6 day shorter frequently increase levels of stress in patients, family and staff (2).
stay than patients in dull rooms By using Evidence Based Design (EBD) principles to consider for
example reducing noise, increasing natural light, and providing
contact with nature the designer can help to create a ‘healing
environment’ that will benefit all of the buildings occupants.
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What is a healing environment?
References
(1) M Schweitzer, Gilpin L, Frampton S. Healing Spaces: Elements of Environmental Design that make an impact on Health. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary
Medicine. 2004, Vol 10, Supplement 1, 71-83
(2) A van den Berg, F Jaspers, C Wagenaar (2005). Health Impacts of Healing Environments: A review of evidence of nature, daylight, fresh air, and quiet in healthcare
settings. Foundation 200 years University Hospital Groningen
(3) Ampt A, Harris P and Maxwell M. The health impacts of the design of hospital facilities on patient recovery and wellbeing: A review of the literature. 2008 Centre for
Primary Healthcare and Equity, University of New South Wales, Sydney
(4) Ulrich RS. View through a window may influence recovery from surgery. Science. 1984, 224(4647):420e1.
(5) Huisman E R C M, Morales E, van Hoof J, Kort H S M. Healing environment: A review of the impact of physical environmental factors on users. Building and
Environment. 2012, 58, 70 - 80
(6) Ulrich R, Zimring C, Xuemei Zhu, DuBose J, Hyun-Bo Seo, Young-Seon Choi, Xiaobo Quan, and Anjali Joseph. A Review of the Research Literature on Evidence based
Healthcare Design. Health Environments Research & Design, 1(3), 2008.
(7) H Salonen , L Morawska. Physical characteristics of the indoor environment that affect health and wellbeing in healthcare facilities: A review. Intelligent Buildings
International, 2013
(8) Bayo, M.V., Garcia, A.M. and Garcia, A., 1995, ‘Noise levels in an urban hospital and workers’ subjective responses’, Archives of Environmental Health, 50 247-251.
(9) Beyea, S.C., 2007, ‘Noise: a distraction, interruption, and safety hazard. AORN Journal.
(10) Biley, F.C., 1994, ‘Effects of noise in hospitals’, British Journal of Community Nursing, 3 (3), 110-113.
(11) Joseph, A., 2010, ‘Hospitals that heal’. Hospital design for the 21st century. Asian hospital and healthcare management.
(12) Hagerman I., Rasmanis G., Blomkvist V., Ulrich R., Eriksen C. A. ,& Theorell T. (2005). Influence of intensive coronary care acoustics on the quality of care and
physiological state of patients. International Journal of Cardiology, 98 (2), 267–270.
(13) Heerwagen, J.H. & Heerwagen, D.R. (1986). Lighting and psychological comfort. Lighting Design + Application, 16 (4), 47-51.
(14) Veitch, J.A., Hine, D.W., & Gifford, R. (1993). End-users’ knowledge, beliefs, and preferences for lighting. Journal of Interior Design, 19 (2), 15-26
(15) Cuttle, C. (2002). Identifying the human values associated with window. International Daylighting, 5, 3-6.
(16) Beauchemin, K.M., & Hays, P. (1996). Sunny hospital rooms expedite recovery from severe and refractory depressions. Journal of Affective Disorders, 40 (1), 49-51.
(17) Young-Mason, J. (2005). “Nature and well-being.” Clinical Nurse Specialist CNS 19(4): 218-219.
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