Peer-Reviewed Publications
Publication: Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ)
Publication Date: First published online Sept 21, 2009. In print August 10, 2010;182(11):E535-E537.
Author: Diana C. Anderson, MD, MArch
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As medicine has moved toward evidence-based practice, so too has hospital design, which is increasingly guided by research linking physical environments to health care outcomes through the process of evidence-based design. The Paimio Sanatorium, built in the early 1930s in the southwest portion of Finland and designed by the architect Alvar Aalto, demonstrates an appreciation for good design and the ambition to create healing environments that emulate nature.
Prior to the development of evidence-based design, Alvar Aalto created a healing environment addressing each patient’s psychological and social needs. Just as the starting point in the Paimio Sanatorium design was the individual whose privacy and comfort were of central importance, the current field of evidence-based hospital design emulates this focus of the physical setting as therapeutic.
Read more about the Paimio Sanatorium and the features of its healing environment.

The primary purpose of this qualitative study was to identify what palliative care patients and their families perceive to be important elements in the design of a palliative care unit (PCU) for end-of-life care. Secondary objectives included exploring whether differences in preferences and perceptions exist between patients and family members. This study looked at the palliative care population of Bridgepoint Hospital in Toronto, Canada, and evaluated patient and family preferences for room design and layout, as well as preference for private versus shared accommodations.
Objectives: The primary purpose of this needs assessment study, which looked at the palliative care population of Bridgepoint Hospital, Toronto, was to describe what patients and their families perceive to be important elements in the design of a hospital palliative care unit (PCU) for end-of-life care.
