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Physical characteristics of the indoor environment that affect health and wellbeing in healthcare facilities: a review

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors reviewed and summarised physical factors of the indoor environment reported to affect human health and wellbeing in HCFs and provided a practical resource for those responsible for the design and operate the facilities as well as researchers investigating these factors.
Abstract
Understanding the physical characteristics of the indoor environment that affect human health and wellbeing is the key requirement underpinning the beneficial design of a healthcare facility (HCF) We reviewed and summarised physical factors of the indoor environment reported to affect human health and wellbeing in HCFs Research materials included articles identified in a Pubmed search, guidelines, books, reports and monographs, as well as the bibliographies of review articles in the area studied Of these, 209 publications were selected for this review According to the literature, there is evidence that the following physical factors of the indoor environment affect the health and wellbeing of human beings in an HCF: safety, ventilation and HVAC systems, thermal environment, acoustic environment, interior layout and room type, windows (including daylight and views), nature and gardens, lighting, colour, floor covering, furniture and its placement, ergonomics, wayfinding, artworks and music Some of these, in themselves, directly promote or hinder health and wellbeing, but the physical factors may also have numerous indirect impacts by influencing the behaviour, actions, and interactions of patients, their families and the staff members The findings of this research enable a good understanding of the different physical factors of the indoor environment on health and wellbeing and provide a practical resource for those responsible for the design and operate the facilities as well as researchers investigating these factors However, more studies are needed in order to inform the design of optimally beneficial indoor environments in HCFs for all user groups

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Citations
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Iconographies supplémentaires de l'article : Factors involved in the aerosol transmission of infection and control of ventilation in healthcare premises

TL;DR: Recommendations are made to improve the control of aerosol-transmitted infections in hospitals as well as in the design and construction of future isolation facilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Healing built-environment effects on health outcomes: environment–occupant–health framework

TL;DR: There was no adequate framework that could integrate existing research findings holistically under a holistic conceptual evaluative framework, and an environment–occupant–health (E-O-H) framework is proposed, taking a holistic perspective to identify and evaluate different HBE characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative improvement in workplace performance through biophilic design: A pilot experiment case study

TL;DR: The present study is one of the first studies evaluating and measuring the combination of greenery and daylight into a biophilic design proposal, and highlights an improvement in well-being, performance, creativity and health by introducing daylight and greenery into workplace design such as biophobic design features.
Journal Article

Design for Mood: Twenty Activity-Based Opportunities to Design for Mood Regulation

TL;DR: A theory-based approach to design for mood regulation is presented in this article, where the main proposition is that design can best influence mood by enabling and stimulating people to engage in a broad range of mood-regulating activities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hospital Nurse Staffing and Patient Mortality, Nurse Burnout, and Job Dissatisfaction

TL;DR: In hospitals with high patient- to-nurse ratios, surgical patients experience higher risk-adjusted 30-day mortality and failure-to-rescue rates, and nurses are more likely to experience burnout and job dissatisfaction.
Book

The Experience of Nature: A Psychological Perspective

TL;DR: A study of the natural environment, people, and the relationship between them is presented in this paper, where the authors offer a research-based analysis of the vital psychological role that nature plays.
Journal ArticleDOI

View through a window may influence recovery from surgery

Roger S. Ulrich
- 27 Apr 1984 - 
TL;DR: Surgical patients assigned to rooms with windows looking out on a natural scene had shorter postoperative hospital stays, received fewer negative evaluative comments in nurses' notes, and took fewer potent analgesics than matched patients in similar Rooms with windows facing a brick building wall.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stress recovery during exposure to natural and urban environments

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the emotional, attentional and physiological aspects of stress reducing influences of nature, and found that both the stressor film and the nature settings elicited high levels of involuntary or automatic attention.
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