Abstract

Purpose Service members of the US Department of Defense (DoD) have alarmingly high rates of depression, anxiety, probable stress disorders and suicidality, all of which are negative health conditions exacerbated by various external stressors. High-stress work conditions – to include shift work, hazardous territories, high-stakes mission sets and generally disconnected sites – require a work environment that facilitates, rather than inhibits, stress reduction and mental well-being. This paper aims to present “salutogenic design” as an innovative approach: Salutogenic design offers demonstrated architectural solutions that improve health and well-being. Design/methodology/approach This paper describes salutogenic design strategies beginning with the need for such an approach, the call to action to implement strategic and tactical solutions and the challenges and financial impacts of such a broad and innovative strategy to improve workplace health, well-being and performance in the DoD and beyond. Examples of these strategies, via biophilic design solutions, are presented in the central Table 1 as an easy-to-reference tool and supported by the voluminous literature as referenced, in part, through this research paper. Findings Salutogenic design strategies offer innovative, financially viable solutions to help mitigate stress and improve workforce well-being while maintaining the highest level of building security requirements in access-controlled spaces and disconnected sites, such as military installations and government compounds. Research limitations/implications Issues of mental and physical health are complex and multi-faceted, and they require complex and multi-faceted solutions. Salutogenic design is presented as one facet of that solution: a tangible solution to an often-intangible issue. Further, as a novel approach to address a critical DoD issue, Table 1 bridges the common gap between high-concept design theory and practical construction-application solutions, with positive value to the health, performance, quality-of-life and well-being of service members. Originality/value To the best of the author’s knowledge, this paper is the first to approach the DoD’s imperative to reduce service members’ mental stress with “salutogenic design.”

Highlights

  • The Department of Defense (DoD) consistently maintains the number one highest stress job in the USA: military enlistment (CareerCast.com, 2019, 2018a, 2018b, 2017a, 2017b)

  • Service members are drawn to their jobs and the mission because they care about their country and its well-being (Brennan et al, 2014)

  • Most notably in the context of improving well-being in all forms of controlled spaces and/ or the DoD, it is imperative that additional applications of salutogenic design strategies, beyond those expressed in this paper, be considered and explored

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The DoD consistently maintains the number one highest stress job in the USA: military enlistment (CareerCast.com, 2019, 2018a, 2018b, 2017a, 2017b). Those with less restrictive facility/control requirements will benefit from the Salutogenic Design Examples section (features, wellness criteria and basic physiological impacts). Cognitive performance (decreased diastolic blood pressure, improved creative performance), elevate emotion/mood/preference (observed view preference, improved comfort)

Design
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call