Dochitect
Menu
  • Home
  • Dochitect Bio
  • The Physician-Architect Model
  • Articles & Publications
  • Presentations
  • In the News
  • Contact

WLRN Public Media Miami: A health provider in South Florida believes better building design can help patients heal

April 22, 2024 / Dochitect / Dochitect in the News

In the News

Publication: WLRN Public Media, Miami NPR member station
Title: A health provider in South Florida believes better building design can help patients heal
Author: Verónica Zaragovia
Date: April 22, 2024

Dochitect speaks to WLRN Public Media about the impact of building design on healing.

Excerpt:

“Changing out lightbulbs in nursing homes can impact fall rates significantly,” said Dr. Diana Anderson, a geriatrician and professor of medicine at Boston University. “Of course, falls are things we don’t want to happen. It causes a lot of economic burden, of injury burden and hospital system use burden.”

Anderson, who’s also a healthcare architect at global solutions firm Jacobs, came up with a term for her expertise in the intersection of medicine and architecture: dochitect.

“It is a term that I created and trademarked, registered as sort of a brand that I think really helps illustrate the fact that these two professions can be integrated,” she said. She strongly believes their integration can help patients significantly. Too much is at stake with the volume of people getting care at a facility like a hospital over the years.

“That’s a pretty strong statement to make, to say that the building you’re in is as powerful to your health as a pill you might take, or a surgical procedure you might have in the hospital,” Anderson said. “But there is evidence to show this is the case.”

She points to research including how close a patient’s room is to a nursing station, color patterns, and even floor lines to help patients with dementia.

Well-being of staff matters, too

The health care model in the U.S. depends a lot on patient satisfaction because it’s a payer model. Anderson’s calling on health systems to care about the design of spaces for staff.

“What we often see in design now is what we call this onstage-offstage model, whereby patients will often get the shiny lobby with the art, the window and the sculpture or fountain and staff will get a lounge at the back of the building without any windows, with barren walls,” she said.

The wellbeing of staff may impact the care and the work they deliver. Until design is made for all of the people inside the walls of a facility, then equity will still be lagging.

“What I think is really neat is that doctors and nurses and other clinical professionals really want to think about design,” Anderson said. “I have people calling me saying, ‘I really, really want a certificate program or a degree because I think it can impact how I deliver care in the operating room, in the clinic space.’”

Health care delivery has no shortage of complex problems. The experts to solve a lot of them are already working at a hospital and she believes having more of them gain expertise in design will yield even better results.

Read or listen to the full story HERE.

A Book from Dochitect

The Dochitect’s Journal: A collection of writings on the intersection of Medicine and Architecture

Find out more here.

Search

Recent Articles/Publications

  • Bioethics Peer Review: A Structured Evaluation Framework for Long-Term Care Environments

    February 13, 2026
  • Book Review of Sick Architecture, by Beatriz Colomina, Nick Axel, and Guillermo S. Arsuaga. The MIT Press, 2025

    November 21, 2025
  • Society of Critical Care Medicine 2024 Guideline on Adult ICU Design

    February 21, 2025

Recent Presentations

  • Keynote Speaker, Women in Science and Engineering (WISE) 14th Annual Conference, University of Toronto

    January 17, 2026
  • RAIC Panel Discussion- Redefining Long-Term Care: Architecture, Culture, and Person-Centered Approaches

    September 3, 2025
  • Canadian Institute: Healthcare Infrastructure for Aging Populations, Atlantic Canada

    July 16, 2025

Publication Type

  • Blog Post
  • Book
  • Book Chapter
  • Book Review
  • Commentaries
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Peer-Reviewed Design Guidelines
  • Peer-Reviewed Publications

Presentation Type

  • Conference Presentations
  • Keynote Presentations
  • Lectures
  • Panel Discussions
  • Podcasts
  • Webinars

Design Topics

  • Commentaries & Event Reviews
  • Design for Clinical Staff
  • Design for Critical Care
  • Design for Geriatrics
  • Design for Infection Control
  • Design for Palliative Care
  • Design for Patient Safety
  • Design for Resiliency
  • Design for the Future of Health
  • Dochitect in the News
  • Evidence-Based Design
  • General
  • Health Design & Ethics
  • The Physician-Architect Model

Archives

Follow Dochitect

Follow me on:

** ©2026 Dochitect :: Site by KPFdigital :: Admin Login