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Design for Clinical Staff

Habitats for Healers: Architectural Design for Clinicians

October 28, 2019 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff

Presentations

Event: CENTILE (Center for Innovation and Leadership in Education)
Title: Habitats for Healers: Architectural Design for Clinicians
Location: Georgetown University
Date: October 28, 2019

Evidence-based design has focused on the patient experience, but what is the impact of architecture on those delivering care?

This Plenary presentation by Dr. Anderson focuses on aspects of healthcare architecture which impact the experience of delivering care and clinician well-being. Can space design help address some aspects of the burnout and moral distress experienced by providers of care? What is the role of the clinician in the healthcare architecture process?

Clinicians are increasingly asking to acquire new skill-sets and knowledge in design thinking to develop novel modes of practice and models of care. Dr. Anderson explores how cross-disciplinary collaboration between the architect and the clinician provides a mechanism for positive change in healthcare.

Keynote Presentations

Clinic room designs must fit care models

October 9, 2019 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff, Health Design & Ethics

Blog Post

Publication: The Medical Post, Canadian Healthcare Network
Title: Clinic room designs must fit care models
Publication Date: October 9, 2019
Authors Diana Anderson, MD

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“Where should I sit?” my geriatric patient asks as he enters the clinic room, his walker just barely clearing the doorway.

I glance around­ at our choices—there’s the clinician’s chair-on-wheels positioned towards the desk with the computer monitor, the examination table itself, or the designated patient chair. I know that today my priority is to discuss advance care planning and goals of care—a discussion that warrants equal footing and a potential surface for reviewing paperwork. Sitting on the exam table for these discussions can be physically challenging for frail patients and is not conducive to discussion equity. The patient chair is an option, only its position next to the desk or across from it implies a hierarchy and awkwardness in formulating conversation.

And wait—my patient has brought a family member, where will they sit?

As medicine increasingly becomes a family affair, especially in the realm of pediatrics and geriatrics, how can clinic room design foster these new models of care? As the emphasis on advance care planning grows with communication of difficult topics now being taught as a clinical skill, there is immense value to re-envisioning the primary care clinic room to support these changes. As a health system we have mainly concentrated on throughput and outcomes required by clinic encounters and not necessarily the experiences of the various user groups—space design and care appear to be more divergent than ever. Now I believe it is the time to focus on the clinic environment to better support all-inclusive care.

Innovative clinic room design can (and should) advance the practice of collaborative thinking and decision-making in medicine by abolishing the “doctor behind the desk” phenomenon. The round table makes an appearance in rare instances of new clinic design, but could become a standard with some clinician advocacy—at least three chairs around it, all of equal design (sturdy, with arm rests). Reminiscent of the Arthurian legend around which knights congregated, the implication was that everyone who sits there has equal status. A computer screen can be used to support the discussions, preferably mounted in a way to be referred to if needed or even retracted—but should not dominate or obstruct the physician-patient interaction.

Clinic rooms should expect family members and be prepared—foldable chairs can be hung on the wall or stored in custom-designed millwork, for quick and easy access. And the examination table often feels like the awkward elephant in the room in its size and placement. In busy clinics where patients rarely undress and gown for a full physical exam, this design element could transition to a specialized reclining chair model. A single procedure room elsewhere in the clinic can be maintained when specific examinations are required.

And while I am reflecting on my “clinic design wish list”, a few wall hooks for patient canes, outerwear and bags, are simple enough and would enhance the encounter. Effective patient encounters do not happen by chance—the impact of design should be realized.

We cannot expect a generic room design to adapt to the changes in medical practice. Can health architects design the clinic room for equitable patient interaction and incorporation of family? Yes, we most definitely can. But a paradigm shift in thoughtful healthcare design is needed with the incorporation of clinicians at the drawing board. This will ensure patients and their families enter clinic rooms which intuitively invite a seat at the table—supporting, not hindering, patient-centered and team-based care.

Dr. Diana Anderson is a Canadian currently doing her geriatric medicine fellowship in the U.S. She thinks of herself as a “dochitect” as she is a board-certified internist, a licensed architect and also a board-certified healthcare architect. Find out more at www.dochitect.com.

Blog Post

Is Hospital Design Equitable?

September 16, 2019 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff, Health Design & Ethics

Blog Post

Publication: CLOSLER.org, Johns Hopkins Medicine
Title: Is Hospital Design Equitable?
Publication Date: September 16, 2019
Author: Diana Anderson, MD

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There is increasing recognition and understanding of the impact built space has on people. While healthcare architecture has strongly advocated for patient-centered design, can the resulting fragmentation and concealment of clinical spaces devalue the role of medical professionals?

Closler.org has an email subscription of ~6,000 healthcare providers
and is regularly visited by thousands of individuals from 70 countries. 

Blog Post

Habitats for Healers: Architectural Design for Clinicians

April 29, 2019 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff, Evidence-Based Design, The Physician-Architect Model

Presentations

Event: Harvard University Graduate School of Design Lecture Series
Title: Habitats for Healers: Architecture Design for Clinicians
Date: April 29 2019

Dochitect was invited to the Harvard’s Graduate School of Design to discuss design for health providers:

 

Lectures

The convergence of architectural design and health – The Lancet

December 7, 2018 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff, Evidence-Based Design, The Physician-Architect Model

Peer-reviewed publication

Publication: The Lancet
Publication Reference: December 7, 2018
Authors: Diana C Anderson, Steph A Pang, Desmond O’Neill, Eve A Edelstein

View Article

The Lancet features Architectural Design and Health!

“During my medical residency, I realized how much burnout affected us as trainees on the front lines of care. In particular, I noticed that much of that difficulty was tied to the areas in which we worked—constant noise, poor lighting, and lack of daylight. Space design made patient care challenging at times, too; for example, not being able to access the correct side of my patient to perform the physical exam as I had been taught. I often considered that the built environment could improve care delivery with more collaboration amongst designers and clinicians.”— Diana Anderson

 

The disciplines of public and environmental health have long recognised the impact of the built environment on health. Yet clinicians have limited opportunity to engage with architects and design professionals, and the impact of health-care design is largely absent from health policy discussions. However, this is beginning to change.

Read more HERE!

 

Peer-Reviewed Publications

Why your practice needs a makeover

December 6, 2018 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff, The Physician-Architect Model

Blog Post

Publication: KevinMD.com, Blog Post
Publication Date: December 6, 2018
Authors: Diana Anderson, MD, MArch & Keith Mankin, MD

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Why your practice needs a makeover

The spaces where we live and work can exert both strong and subtle influences on the way our brains function. They can make us anxious, distracted, inefficient or tired, affecting not only our cognitive ability but also our emotional state, mental stability, and physical well-being. Clinical medical practice, like much of life in our society, is tethered to indoor space, so physicians, staff and patients alike are particularly prone to these psychological effects.

The good news is that continued study of the effects of design on our well-being, and of those we work with, has led to better recognition of “trouble” points and ways to improve them. Many of these improvements are easy and inexpensive to accomplish and may lead to a better environment for engagement and healing.

The first step is an honest assessment of the clinical space and the throughput from the focus of the physician, the staff and the patients. Look at the surroundings, listen to the ambient noise, feel the amount of room and the sense of space. Let your staff do the same thing and compare responses. Even consider a simple survey of the patients.

5 design flaws that can hurt your practice

  • Lack of space for staff-to-staff interactions
  • Lack of “reset” rooms – a place where staff or provider can step away from the practice work and recharge for a couple of minutes. Many clinicians have offices, but their desks are full of distractions. A reset room should be the opposite
  • Inefficient and clumsy exam room design
  • Lack of natural lighting (or an alternative if the space doesn’t allow windows to the outside)
  • Noisy, overly hectic waiting rooms

So what can be done about these and other problem areas in the practice design? The following is a list of suggestions, but the most important factor is a willingness to try changes. Most of these are easily reversible if they don’t work. They are workable even in shared environments (although compromises about stylistic designs may need to be made). Most importantly they will not fundamentally change the organization of the practice, although clinicians should be open even to more drastic changes if necessary. The entire healing system may be in the balance.

8 simple ideas to improve your practice

  • Find the clinic’s quiet spaces and use them. Recent guidelines have called for stricter control of blood pressure, but many practices do not even have a quiet spot to measure vital signs. A small comfortable room can be set aside for BP measurement, or even as a “coping” room for patients or staff
  • Design the patient (and staff) flow for efficiency and convenience. The goal should be to minimize steps and prevent everyone from having to retrace their steps
  • Make the waiting rooms productive spaces. Patients don’t really want the television blaring at all times. Having a usable Wi-Fi, having a small library, presenting informative information, setting up the chairs so people can interact can all go a long way towards minimizing stress and improving the mood and receptivity of the patient.
  • Choose colors carefully
  • Use the windows for natural lighting whenever possible
  • Invest in artwork
  • Design the clinic for universal use. Unless the space is dedicated to one age group or type of patient, or if it is truly a solo practice, it is useful to pick colors, furniture, and lighting that will be useful and engaging to a broad range. This doesn’t mean the palette needs to be olive drab
  • Develop spaces for education and engagement. The ambulatory care experience is not just about the doctor/patient interaction anymore. It now encompasses teaching, prevention, and resources for making healthful decisions. A resource center (as simple as an orderly selection of booklets or as complicated as video and computer learning stations) can be incorporated into the clinic setting. A small conference area can allow teaching sessions

In summary, the key to making a clinic work better is to first, understand what doesn’t work; second, know what the research suggests; and third, make small incremental changes (or even large ones if necessary) that will put these practices into effect. We as clinicians must understand that the healing process is not just the “laying on of hands.” It is the entire scope of a patent’s experience from the moment they step through the office door.

Diana Anderson is an architect and physician. She is principal, Steffian Bradley Architects, Boston, MA. She can be reached at Dochitect. Keith Mankin is a pediatric orthopaedic surgeon and host, PeerSpectrum Medical Podcast.

Blog Post

Clinicians for Design: A Convergence of Expertise to Enhance Cognition and Healthcare Design

September 20, 2018 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff, Evidence-Based Design, The Physician-Architect Model

Presentations

Event: The Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture (ANFA) – Congress, Salk Institute, CA
Title: Clinicians for Design: A Convergence of Expertise to Enhance Cognition and Healthcare Design How Architecture Impacts our Health
Format: Poster presentation
Authors: Eve Edelstein, Diana Anderson, Thomas Grey, Desmond O’Neill
Date: September 20-22, 2018

Dochitect participates in a Poster Presentation at The Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture 2018!

Click here to see the full 2018 ANFA Conference abstract proceedings from the “Shared Behavioral Outcomes” event

ABSTRACT:
Background:
Increasingly, clinicians are asking not only for the architect’s perspective, but to develop a design skill-set and knowledge base that will allow them to help shape the future of hospitals, medicine, and healthcare.

Purpose/Objectives:
Clinicians for Design is an international network of clinicians and researchers with a vision to inspire and accelerate the design of environments that enhance health outcomes through innovations in healthcare spaces, technologies, care delivery systems and policies (1). The inaugural Clinicians for Design workshop was hosted at the Royal College of Physicians, during the European Healthcare Design conference, London, UK in June, 2017. Thereafter, workshops and research activities with hospitals and academic medical centers are exploring key lessons learned from the clinicians, healthcare system leaders, and medical researchers. Specific objectives include the application of research to improve practice, meetings to increase clinician understanding of the architectural process, and integration of clinical expertise with design-thinking.

Methods/Results:

As ‘neuro-architectural’ research converges with clinically-informed design, it has inspired the emergence of new models of practice for dementia care. A network of like-minded clinicians, neuroscientists, and a team of geriatricians and designers have formed an alliance to enable a deeper understanding of the elements which contribute to dementia-inclusive design in healthcare facilities. A leading cause of institutionalization for those with dementia is often spatial disorientation (2). Absence of cognitive mapping in dementia can be partially compensated for by using other forms of orientation strategies (3). Therefore, the design of healthcare facilities can significantly influence one’s spatial orientation and wayfinding abilities (4). This grant funded study aims to develop a ‘Design Audit Tool’ in line with Dementia-Inclusive Design Guidelines, ensuring equality across healthcare users (5). The goal is for inclusive, accessible, and easily understood environmental design for people with dementia, based on neurological and architectural research.

Implications:
Clinicians and designers discuss their progress in identifying dementia care pathways and research outcomes using a transdisciplinary approach. The advances towards a dementia inclusive healthcare audit tool is described, including the role of experts and emerging professionals in medicine, research, and design who seek an enduring connection between clinical practice and architecture.

REFERENCES:
(1) Anderson DC, Pang SA, Edelstein EA, O’Neill D. The Convergence of Architectural Design and Health: Clinicians for Design. The Lancet. 2018. Unpublished [Submitted, under review].
(2) Monacelli AM, Cushman LA, Kavcic V, Duffy CJ. Spatial disorientation in Alzheimer‘s disease: The remembrance of things passed. Neurology. 2003 Dec 9;61(11):1491-7.
(3) Poettrich K, Weiss PH, Werner A, Lux S, Donix M, Gerber J, von Kummer R, Fink GR, Holthoff VA. Altered neural network supporting declarative long-term memory in mild cognitive impairment. Neurobiol Aging. 2009 Feb;30(2):284-98. Epub 2007 Jul 17.
(4) Marquardt G. Wayfinding for people with dementia: a review of the role of architectural design. HERD. 2011 Winter;4(2):75-90.
(5) De Suin A, O’Shea E, Timmons S, McArdle D, Gibbons P, O’Neill D, Kenneally SP, Gallagher P. Irish National Audit of Dementia Care in Acute Hospitals. Cork: National Audit of Dementia Care. 2014.

Conference Presentations

Extreme Makeover: Hospital Edition. Physician & Architect, Dr. Diana Anderson

September 18, 2018 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff, Evidence-Based Design

Presentations

Podcast: PeersSpectrum Podcast
Title: Extreme Makeover: Hospital Edition. Physician & Architect, Dr. Diana Anderson
Date: September 18, 2018

Dochitect is featured by PeerSpectrum Podcast!

 

 

What is PeerSpectrum? “The practice of modern medicine is rapidly changing, and increasingly complex. Finance, negotiation, communication, technology, personal branding and data analytics are just some of the “non-medical” skills now required of modern physicians. Simply keeping up isn’t enough. Going it alone won’t cut it either. Staying ahead requires the help of specialized experts who can be resources for your practice. This is the podcast to find those experts, both inside and outside of medicine. Turn your downtime into up-time and recharge with incredible stories and unique perspectives from your entire spectrum of peers.”

You can find the podcast on iTunes, and the PeerSpectrum website (along with other platforms like Google Play and Sticher)

Podcasts

Virtual Windows and Beyond: Design solutions to improve the mental health of clinical staff

May 27, 2017 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff

Presentations

Presentation Title: Virtual Windows and Beyond: Design solutions to improve the mental health of clinical staff
Event: 6th Annual Mental Health Symposium, Virtual Ability Island Second Life
Presentation Date: Saturday, May 27, 2017
Event Location: Online in Second Life

Virtual Ability enables people with a wide range of disabilities by providing a supporting environment for them to enter and thrive in online virtual worlds. In addition to hosting the annual Mental Health Symposium, a free professional conference open to the general public, the Virtual Ability community posts exhibits and displays related to mental health on its Healthinfo Island. The theme this year was “I can relate to that.” 

Dr. Anderson speaks at The Sojourner Auditorium on Virtual Ability Island in Second Life about ways in which design and virtual technologies might support the mental health and well-being of clinical staff.

Dr. Anderson was also an invited guest on The Drax Files Radio Show to discuss the topic of ‘Mental Health in a Virtual World’. Click here to listen to the podcast.

Conference Presentations, Podcasts

Disruptive Innovation: Is it time to re-think our healthcare design strategies?

November 14, 2016 / Dochitect / Design for Clinical Staff, Design for Geriatrics

Presentations

Presentation Title: Disruptive Innovation: Is it time to re-think our healthcare design strategies?
Event: Healthcare Design Expo & Conference 2016
Presentation Date: November 14, 2016
Event Location: Houston, Texas

Dr. Anderson co-leads a round table session with Dr. George Taffet, MD, FACP, Chief, Geriatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston Methodist Hospital, to discuss the impact of space design on geriatric patients and clinical staff.

speakingSession Description:

Healthcare design’s recent revolution towards improved patient experience and care delivery has remained similar for several decades. Hospital activist Dr. Leland Kaiser stated that “The hospital is a human invention and as such can be reinvented any time.” Given that there is no therapeutic value to strict bed rest, which can in fact be detrimental and lead to deconditioning- most notably in the elderly population, should the patient bed continue to be the focal point around which we design the room?  Hospital corridors are already dynamic spaces of patient physical therapy, multidisciplinary team rounding, family discussions and infection control practices. Can a hospital corridor become more than a long narrow space with equipment spilling over and laundry bins scattered throughout? The notion of separating patient and staff circulation has become best practice in healthcare design over recent years. With healthcare moving in the direction of the patient becoming the advocate of their own healthcare and clinicians providing the expertise to aid patients in their decision-making, should the physical design separate what the clinical model is trying to unify? It may be time to disrupt our current design thinking and reinvent some best practice design trends.

img_0118 Learning Objectives:

  • To challenge current healthcare design thinking through the integration of medical knowledge and upcoming clinical trends.
  • Outline new ways of thinking about the space needs of clinicians by considering staff utilization of space given changing medical practices, including areas for information transfer and multidisciplinary rounding practices.
  • Understand the geriatric patient needs and how to accommodate complex chronic illness models within the built environment.
  • Review circulation and flow patterns of clinicians, patients and visitors in order to discuss the on-stage/off-stage model of wayfinding within an acute care space versus the ambulatory care model.

Session Panels:

12 43 5 Conference Presentations
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