Abstract

There is a growing interest among healthcare managers and designers in moving towards a ‘patient-centred’ design of health and care facilities by integrating patient perceptions and expectations of the physical environment where care takes place. Increased interests in physical environments can mostly be attributed to our improved understanding of their role in patients’ health outcomes and staff productivity. There is a gap in the literature on users’ perspectives on physical settings in the context of healthcare. Moreover, the connection of care services with the design of the facility is often overlooked partly due to the lack of evidence. This research was aimed at filling the gap by exploring outpatients’ perspectives on design factors related to the areas frequented by them, e.g., hospital waiting areas. A 16-item questionnaire was conducted among randomly selected outpatients in two hospitals in Qingdao, China, with a response rate of 84.3%. Five principal factors were identified: sensory; lighting and thermal; facilities; spatial; and seating design, which agreed with the literature. Non-parametric tests were applied to assess variances in constructed principal dimensions concerning demographic variables. Female outpatients were found to be more perceptive of the ‘sensory design’ factors than males. The number of previous visits to the hospital was found to be associated with ‘spatial’ and ‘seating design’ factors, while respondents’ age had an association with ‘sensory’ and ‘seating design’ factors. Respondents ranked ‘noise’ and ‘air freshness’ and ‘cleanliness’ as highly important.

Highlights

  • Patient healing is a complex and dynamic process, during which the role of the physical environment has been recognised and emphasised by many researchers due to its influence on patient health outcomes and wellbeing [1,2,3]

  • The interconnections between the characteristics of the physical environment and patient health outcomes emphasise the importance of the physical environment design in creating a healing environment [3,4,5]

  • This research was aimed to address the need for a reliable and valid instrument associated with design indicators of waiting areas in healthcare facilities via assessing outpatient’s perspectives

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Summary

Introduction

Patient healing is a complex and dynamic process, during which the role of the physical environment has been recognised and emphasised by many researchers due to its influence on patient health outcomes and wellbeing [1,2,3]. There is, a growing interest in the patient-centred architectural design of healthcare facilities among researchers and service providers [7,8]. Patient-centred design (PCD) is a process involving design and evaluation that pays attention to facility users [9,10]; that is, human factors that affect the outcome of the healing process. It requires healthcare architects/designers making an effort to shape and reshape the healing environment, addressing patients’ needs to provide satisfying healing experience and achieve desired outcomes of perceived service quality [11]. The quality of healthcare is evaluated by Buildings 2017, 7, 117; doi:10.3390/buildings7040117 www.mdpi.com/journal/buildings

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