Abstract
The built environment of health care systems plays a crucial role in factors such as patient safety, staff satisfaction, patient experience, and optimal health. As hospital centers are being renovated or expanded over the past decade or so, the clinical built environment of many of them have not been redesigned to align with today’s evolving clinical roles. Just as medicine has increasingly moved toward “evidence-based medicine,” where clinical choices are informed by research, healthcare design is increasingly guided by rigorous research linking the physical environment of hospitals to patients and staff outcomes and is moving toward “evidence-based design”. The goal of human simulations in the context of architectural builds is to present the workflow (both normal and emergent) in the design of the complex cooperative work environment. The results obtained can be used to change the design process by improving the built environment to support end users to provide optimal health, exceptional experience, and organizational vitality. These proceedings describe the process and provide an example of the evaluation of a future single patient neonatal intensive care unit room.
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