Abstract

The challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic have led to the development of new hospital design strategies and models of care. To enhance staff safety while preserving patient safety and quality of care, hospitals have created a new model of remote inpatient care using telemedicine technologies. The design of the COVID-19 units divided the space into contaminated and clean zones and integrated a control room with audio-visual technologies to remotely supervise, communicate, and support the care being provided in the contaminated zone. The research is based on semi-structured interviews and observations of care processes that implemented a new model of inpatient telemedicine at Sheba Medical Center in Israel in different COVID-19 units, including an intensive care unit (ICU) and internal medicine unit (IMU). The study examines the impact of the diverse design layouts of the different units associated with the implementation of digital technologies for remote care on patient and staff safety. The results demonstrate the challenges and opportunities of integrating inpatient telemedicine for critical and intermediate care to enhance patient and staff safety. We contribute insights into the design of hospital units to support new models of remote care and suggest implications for Evidence-based Design (EBD), which will guide much needed future research.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has driven healthcare institutions to rapidly develop new models of care

  • This study examines the integration of hospital design strategies with the implementation of digital technologies for remote care and the impact of the new model on patient and staff safety across different levels of care

  • The integration of digital technologies for remote care within the built environment of the hospital created a new model of care that enhanced patient and staff safety

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic has driven healthcare institutions to rapidly develop new models of care. The need to protect medical personnel from contamination while providing quality care for COVID-19 patients has led to innovative strategies integrating hospital design with digital technologies for remote care. The new model of inpatient telemedicine evolved from the electronic intensive care unit (e-ICU), which has demonstrated its potential to enhance care [1,2] and its feasibility across diverse settings as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic [3]. This study examines the integration of hospital design strategies with the implementation of digital technologies for remote care and the impact of the new model on patient and staff safety across different levels of care.

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