Abstract

With regard to the outpatient areas of a hospital, the smoothness of the route is now taken into consideration in the process of configuring the wayfinding system. As patients often spend time on ineffective wayfinding processes, and there is limited manpower at hospitals and a lack of clarity in the information provided by the wayfinding system, it is difficult to provide effective and timely consultation services for patients. This study was conducted at Cheng Ching Hospital, Chung Kang Branch (CCH/CKB) in Taiwan. This study attempts to investigate the relationships between the wayfinding system of the outpatient areas and the patients’ behaviors in the hospital. Depthmap software based on space syntax is adopted to assist in the route analysis and wayfinding behaviors. It integrates axial mapping analysis and isovist analysis and gives suggestions on the location, format and content of the wayfinding system. The final results of the study show that in the wayfinding task experiment gender has no significant impact on the effect of wayfinding efficiency, while a significant difference is found for age. Older people need more time to complete the wayfinding task, which means that they have poorer performance in wayfinding efficiency. The analysis of the results of space syntax shows that a good wayfinding system should be a symmetric tree-branch structure rather than circular structure in a medical building, that areas where it is easy to become lost should have a clear signage guiding system planning and configuration, and that clear guidance information should be provided to the patients to achieve the goal of saving consultation time and improving the quality of the medical environment.

Highlights

  • Nowadays, medical treatment is naturally more advanced, and the types of diseases and treatment methods used are becoming more and more detailed

  • The routes in each section are numbered by Depthmap software, and the global integration is ranked by the Rn value of all the outpatient area routes in the medical building after axial mapping analysis

  • This study investigated the relationships between the spatial configuration of the outpatient areas of health care facilities and the wayfinding behavior of patients

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Summary

Introduction

Medical treatment is naturally more advanced, and the types of diseases and treatment methods used are becoming more and more detailed. The space required for the corresponding examination and treatment in different units has been expanded at health care facilities in order to meet the demands for medical treatment Facing these changes in medical operations and more detailed diagnostic units, if health care facilities do not have additional land or sufficient funds to construct a new medical building, when it comes to the early-stage wayfinding system configuration and planning the primary consideration is indoor partitioning and changing the routes in existing buildings to meet the new demands. It is necessary to construct a user-friendly framework for an indoor public space wayfinding system for health care facilities, for use by both patients and visitors [2,3]

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