The gaps between healthcare service and building design: a state of the art review

Healthcare buildings are designed to achieve diverse objectives, anging from providing appropriate environments where care can be elivered to communities to increasing operational efficiency and proving patient flows and the patient experience. Improvements in ficiency should result from state-of-th...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Principais autores: Tzortzopoulos, Patrícia, Codinhoto, Ricardo, Kagioglou, Mike, Rooke, John, Koskela, Lauri
Formato: Online
Idioma:por
Publicado em: ANTAC - Associação Nacional de Tecnologia do Ambiente Construído 2009
Acesso em linha:https://seer.ufrgs.br/ambienteconstruido/article/view/7552
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Resumo:Healthcare buildings are designed to achieve diverse objectives, anging from providing appropriate environments where care can be elivered to communities to increasing operational efficiency and proving patient flows and the patient experience. Improvements in ficiency should result from state-of-the-art buildings, more appropriate layouts, departmental adjacencies, efficient clinical and business processes and enhanced information systems. However, complexities around requirements and stakeholders management may prevent the achievement of such objectives. The aim of this article is to identify and understand how healthcare services (re)design and building design can be integrated to facilitate increased performance both in terms of service delivery and future changes. Findings indicate that current approaches and innovation are restricted due to functional barriers in the design process, and that there is a need to support the development of operations driven design through time (e.g. flexible and durable) that satisfies diverse needs.