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1.
Ann Ig ; 33(5): 513-517, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34224553

ABSTRACT

Abstract: Starting from the minimum requirements indicated by Lombardy Region, a validation checklist has been developed by experts in design, healthcare layout planning, hygiene and public health, planning and compliance, in order to provide managers of COVID-19 massive vaccination centers with a useful and easy-to-use tool to ensure quality, safety and efficiency of the different activities performed.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 Vaccines , COVID-19/prevention & control , Community Health Centers/organization & administration , Mass Vaccination/organization & administration , SARS-CoV-2 , Validation Studies as Topic , COVID-19 Vaccines/supply & distribution , Checklist , Community Health Centers/standards , Efficiency, Organizational , Facility Design and Construction , Humans , Hygiene , Italy , Patient Safety , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Quality Indicators, Health Care
2.
Ann Ig ; 33(4): 381-392, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33270076

ABSTRACT

Abstract: Many of the devastating pandemics and outbreaks of last centuries have been caused by enveloped viruses. The recent pandemic of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has seriously endangered the global health system. In particular, hospitals have had to deal with a frequency in the emergency room and a request for beds for infectious diseases never faced in the last decades. It is well-known that hospitals are environments with a high infectious risk. Environmental control of indoor air and surfaces becomes an important means of limiting the spread of SARS-CoV-2. In particular, to preserve an adequate indoor microbiological quality, an important non-pharmacological strategy is represented by Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning (HVAC) systems and finishing materials. Starting from the SARS-CoV-2 transmission routes, the paper investigates the hospital risk analysis and management, the indoor air quality and determination of microbial load, surface management and strategies in cleaning activities, HVAC systems' management and filters' efficiency. In conclusion, the paper suggests some strategies of interventions and best practices to be taken into considerations for the next steps in design and management.


Subject(s)
Air Microbiology , Air Pollution, Indoor , COVID-19/prevention & control , Health Facilities , Pandemics , SARS-CoV-2/isolation & purification , Air Conditioning , COVID-19/transmission , Construction Materials , Cross Infection/prevention & control , Cross Infection/transmission , Equipment Contamination , Equipment Design , Filtration/instrumentation , Filtration/methods , Heating , Hospital Design and Construction , Humans , Particulate Matter , Risk Assessment , Ventilation/instrumentation
3.
Ann Ig ; 32(5 Supple 1): 36-51, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33146366

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: World Health Organization has highlighted the need to strengthen the relationship between health and built environment factors, such as inappropriate housing conditions. Building Regulations and Local Health Rules provide safety and building hygiene in construction practices. Currently the Italian Government is giving rise to a Building Regulation Type and the paper aims to verify the present contents of recent innovative Local Health Rules and Building Regulations of several Italian municipalities for supporting the performance approach of the future Building Regulations including hygienic issues. METHODS: The analysis examines both Building Regulations and Local Health Rules of a sample of about 550 cities, analysing some specific fields of interest: urban field, outdoor issues, housing features, housing restrictions, and qualitative aspects. RESULTS: The analysis focuses on some specific aspects defining the general data reported in Building Regulations and Local Health Rules, in particular around surfaces, heights, lighting and aeration ratio, basements and semi-basements, gas radon, building greenery, etc. CONCLUSION: The investigation permitted to have a wide vision on the present State of the Art in order to highlight some innovative aspects and design approaches of Building Regulations and Local Health Rules. New perspectives in the new regulations should have a performance approach, starting also from the recent SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.


Subject(s)
Building Codes/legislation & jurisprudence , Coronavirus Infections , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Hygiene/legislation & jurisprudence , Pandemics , Pneumonia, Viral , COVID-19 , Cities , Humans , Italy , Surveys and Questionnaires
4.
Ann Ig ; 32(5 Supple 1): 66-84, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33146368

ABSTRACT

In recent years, the Scientific Community and the Public Health world, in general, have devoted increasing interest to housing conditions, which are considered, to date, one of the main environmental and social determinants of the population's health. In particular, the Scientific Community has identified and studied various indoor well-being factors (e.g. lighting, temperature, ventilation, air quality, etc.). Some of these factors have been regulated by laws and regulations at various levels: the availability of clear and updated health requirements dictated by the regulations is fundamental to effectively protect public health, especially in confined environments. In the present work, we propose a revision of the Italian Ministerial Decree of July 5th, 1975 titled Modificazioni alle istruzioni ministeriali 20 giugno 1896 relativamente all'altezza minima ed ai requisiti igienico sanitari principali dei locali d'abitazione (Modifications to the ministerial instructions of June 20th, 1896 regarding the minimum height and the main hygienic-sanitary requirements of living spaces) in order to update the definition of the essential elements that qualify a space as habitable from the hygienic-sanitary point of view, taking into account the evidence gathered from the technical and scientific literature on the requirements and contents of the Building Codes of the major European countries.


Subject(s)
Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Hygiene/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Building Codes/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Italy , Social Determinants of Health/legislation & jurisprudence
5.
Ann Ig ; 32(5 Supple 1): 85-109, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33146369

ABSTRACT

The traditional emphasis of Public Health on the type and quality of housing today merges with other wider determinants of health such as: the neighbourhood, the community and the "place" where a home is located, but also the policies that make access to a healthy home within everyone's reach. At the neighbourhood scale, context-related aspects heavily influence the internal quality and real usability of the buildings themselves, with particular reference to factors such as the quality of the site, the relationship between the building and the context, the presence and quality of the greenery and open spaces surrounding the building, as well as all measures that make it possible to reduce the building's impact on the environment, to protect it against environmental pollution, and to manage the building in an integrated manner for maintenance purposes. Creating healthy living environments means referring to the different dimensions mentioned above, and this not only requires the attention of Public Health operators, but also implies an integration of vision and objectives among various professional skills and competences that puts health at the center of all policies. This proposal, which starts from the analysis of existing local hygiene regulations and scientific literature, aims to take stock of a number of areas considered fundamental for the assessment of building hygiene aspects, with particular reference to the eco-sustainability of buildings and adaptation to climate change. The aspects identified can be considered as a starting point for the preparation of integrated building and hygiene regulations based on documented effective practices for the protection of Public Health.


Subject(s)
Building Codes/legislation & jurisprudence , Housing/standards , Hygiene/standards , Public Health/standards , Environmental Pollution/prevention & control , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Hygiene/legislation & jurisprudence , Italy , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence
6.
Ann Ig ; 32(5): 549-566, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32744586

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Healthcare environments are one of the most complex and demanding fields of work. Scientific, technological and research developments along with new discoveries within health promotion and prevention strategies are increasingly requiring a multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary approach. Therefore, it is likely that the current professions will need to be significantly adapted to accommodate new and more specialized roles. OBJECTIVES: To present an overview of the current educational and training courses of the emerging professions, such as hospital planner, physician-engineer, doctor-architect, nurse-architect or engineer, we review the present global training courses (BSc, MSc, specialization and PhD courses) related to healthcare design focusing on the fields of Medicine and Nursing, Architecture and Engineering sciences. RESULTS: The paper analyses the literature review and website analysis about active teaching programs and courses. Several academic institutions offer BSc, MSc and PhD degree programs in Healthcare Design, Environmental and Building Hygiene, and Public Health. In addition, there are several professional postgraduate courses, either in classroom, hybrid-based or online. CONCLUSIONS: A considerable number of international training experiences addresses the topic of training multidisciplinary professionals. Further in-depth investigations are needed to examine the content, teaching format and impact of the courses, student outcomes and professional careers, fields of interest and the degree of collaborations with other institutions.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Facility Design and Construction/standards , Hospital Administration/education , Interdisciplinary Research/education , Forecasting , Humans
7.
Ann Ig ; 31(2): 165-180, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30714614

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Healthcare facilities are complex infrastructures where different features from technological, social, clinical and architectural field interact. In modern healthcare systems there is a growing attention to the need of quality in terms of process and outcome, while the structural (physical) aspects are not often considered. Since the Nineties the theory of the Evidence Based Design (EBD) states that there is significant relationship between built environment and health related outcome. OBJECTIVE: Aim of this paper is to investigate, in the recent scientific literature, which are the most important occupants' and organizational outcomes influenced by EBD hospital built environment qualities. METHODOLOGY: A Literature Review based on Scopus and PubMed databases has been run in order to understand the existing situation in terms of hospital quality evaluation from the physical and architectural point of view and to highlight the current trends. The results of the different reviews, empirical studies and post Occupancy Evaluations have been analyzed according to Ulrich's EBD conceptual framework. RESULTS: 35 peer reviewed papers from the last 2 years were included. The methodologies adopted are very different and data are mainly collected through structured interviews or observations and elaborated with qualitative (33%), quantitative (26%) or mixed (41%) methodologies. The topic is mostly investigated in USA, Australia, Canada, UK and in the Scandinavian region; few contributions come also from Italy. Built environment variables that affect user's or organizational outcomes are mainly the Visual Environment (29%), the Audio Environment (20%) and the Patient Room Design (20%). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The most recurrent outcomes found to be affected by the built environmental qualities are staff job satisfaction (n=11), patients' stress reduction (n=9), patients' satisfaction (n=6) and patients' fall reduction (n=6). Organizational outcomes are mentioned only two times. Although EBD is an old theory, the topic is both contemporary and relevant. Due to the diversity of the contributions and the limitations of the research, a deep comparison is challenging. Further investigation is necessary to deepen each of the variables identified.


Subject(s)
Built Environment , Hospital Design and Construction , Hospitals/standards , Evidence-Based Medicine , Humans , Job Satisfaction , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Patient Satisfaction , Personnel, Hospital/psychology , Research Design
8.
Ann Ig ; 29(6): 481-493, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29048447

ABSTRACT

The Erice 50 Charter titled "Strategies for Diseases Prevention and Health Promotion in Urban Areas" was unanimously approved at the conclusion of the 50th Residential Course "Urban Health. Instruments for promoting health and for assessing hygienic and sanitary conditions in urban areas", held from 29th March to 2nd April 2017 in Erice, at the "Ettore Majorana" Foundation and Centre for Scientific Culture and promoted by the International School of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine "G. D'Alessandro" and the Study Group "Building Hygiene" of the Italian Society of Hygiene, Preventive Medicine and Public Health (SItI). At the conclusion of the intense learning experience during the Course, with more than 20 lectures, workshops and long-lasting discussions between Professors and Students, the participants identified the major points connecting urban features and Public Health, claiming the pivotal role of urban planning strategies for the management of Diseases Prevention and Health Promotion activities. The Erice 50 Charter is configured as a Decalogue for Healthy Cities and as a Think Tank for designing effective strategic actions and best practices to develop urban regeneration interventions and improve the urban quality of contemporary cities. The Decalogue is structured into the following key strategic objectives: 1. Promoting urban planning interventions that address citizens towards healthy behaviours; 2. Improving living conditions in the urban context; 3. Building an accessible and inclusive city, with a special focus on the frail population; 4. Encouraging the foundation of resilient urban areas; 5. Supporting the development of new economies and employment through urban renewal interventions; 6. Tackling social inequalities; 7. Improving stakeholders' awareness of the factors affecting Public Health in the cities; 8. Ensuring a participated urban governance; 9. Introducing qualitative and quantitative performance tools, capable of measuring the city's attitude to promote healthy lifestyles and to monitor the population's health status; 10. Encouraging sharing of knowledge and accessibility to informations. Finally, all the participants underlined that a multidisciplinary team, composed of Physicians specialized in Hygiene, Preventive Medicine, Public Health and Technicians as Architects, Urban planners and Engineers, is needed to deepen the research topic of Urban Health.


Subject(s)
Health Promotion/methods , Primary Prevention/methods , Urban Health , Humans , Italy
9.
J Prev Med Hyg ; 58(2): E195-E199, 2017 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28900362

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The Working Group for Hygiene of Built Environment and the National Council of Residents of the Italian Society of Hygiene, Preventive Medicine and Public Health conducted a nation-wide survey to evaluate the knowledge and training needs on Built Environment and Indoor Health of Italian public health residents. RESULTS: The compliance was very high (52,4%), covering the totality of Italian postgraduate schools. The results underline a severe lack of theoretical formation and practical training, but also diffuse discrepancies across the country, and show a strong interest of residents on this topic. CONCLUSIONS: The authors propose to adopt a national core curriculum, and suggest some strategies to improve learning.


Subject(s)
Built Environment , Public Health/education , Adult , Curriculum , Education, Graduate , Educational Measurement , Female , Humans , Italy , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires
10.
Theriogenology ; 94: 100-104, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28407851

ABSTRACT

Blood lactate concentration is known to be a good prognostic indicator associated with the severity of illness and the patient's outcome both in human and veterinary medicine. It also plays a significant role in the assessment of the newborn, being a good indicator of fetal hypoxia and the ideal predictor of morbidity at term in babies. In veterinary neonatal medicine, hyperlactatemia is considered a valid prognostic marker in critically ill foals; moreover, blood lactate measurement has been proposed for the evaluation of newborn viability and the assessment of fetal distress during delivery in dogs. Unfortunately, only a few studies have been published concerning the canine species. The present work examines 67 brachycephalic newborn dogs and their mothers, with the aim to evaluate the time-dependent changes of blood lactate and glucose concentration during the first 24 h after vaginal or caesarean delivery both in puppies and bitches. To our knowledge, this is the first published study examining the time-dependent changes of these parameters in the bitch after parturition. Within the studied population of puppies, non-surviving was significantly associated with a higher lactatemia and a lower APGAR score. Blood lactate was high at birth then progressively decreased during the first 24 h of life and a lack of normalization of blood lactate levels within this time interval was suggestive for a poor prognosis for the newborn dogs; moreover, the decrease appeared to be slower after vaginal delivery. Lactatemia also showed a positive correlation with glycemia at birth. Concerning the bitches examined, blood lactate was found to be significantly higher after vaginal delivery than after caesarean section; the normalization occurred within 24 h after parturition. Blood glucose level was significantly higher at 2 h from delivery both in the group of bitches submitted to caesarean section and in those undergoing natural whelping but no statistical correlation was found between maternal glycemia and lactatemia. The results of the present study highlighted that the monitoring of lactatemia during the first 24 h of life, in association with the assessment of the APGAR score at birth, can be an useful prognostic tool helping to identify the most severely distressed puppies and to provide them an adequate support.


Subject(s)
Craniosynostoses/diagnosis , Dog Diseases/diagnosis , Lactic Acid/blood , Animals , Animals, Newborn/blood , Craniosynostoses/blood , Craniosynostoses/epidemiology , Dog Diseases/blood , Dog Diseases/epidemiology , Dogs , Female , Pregnancy , Prognosis
11.
Ann Ig ; 29(2): 92-100, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28244578

ABSTRACT

The Study Group on Hospital Hygiene of the Italian Society of Hygiene, Preventive Medicine and Public Health (GISIO-SItI) and the Local Health Authority of Foggia, Apulia, Italy, after the National Convention "Safe water in healthcare facilities" held in Vieste-Pugnochiuso on 27-28 May 2016, present the "Vieste Charter", drawn up in collaboration with experts from the National Institute of Health and the Ministry of Health. This paper considers the risk factors that may affect the water safety in healthcare facilities and reports the current regulatory frameworks governing the management of installations and the quality of the water. The Authors promote a careful analysis of the risks that characterize the health facilities, for the control of which specific actions are recommended in various areas, including water safety plans; approval of treatments; healthcare facilities responsibility, installation and maintenance of facilities; multidisciplinary approach; education and research; regional and national coordination; communication.


Subject(s)
Health Facilities/standards , Safety/standards , Water Microbiology/standards , Water Supply/standards , Health Facilities/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Promotion , Humans , Italy , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Health/standards , Risk Factors , Safety/legislation & jurisprudence , Water Purification/legislation & jurisprudence , Water Purification/standards , Water Supply/legislation & jurisprudence
12.
Ann Ig ; 28(6): 381-391, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27845472

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: It's scientifically known that inactivity is one of the major risk factors for Non-Communicable Diseases. One of the elements affecting the choice of transport mode, regarding circulation in the city, is the cities' urban morphology, i.e. the infrastructural facilities for the slow mobility service. Cyclability, in fact, can help to increase daily physical activity level, therefore becoming a protective factor for individual health. METHODS: After a literature review about the state of the art regarding the correlation between built environment, active transport and quantification of the physical activity level, we have developed a specific questionnaire to collect information about current and forecast use of bicycle, in case of improvement and implementation of the cycling network. The questionnaire also investigated social and health aspects concerning the anamnesis of the interviewees (age, gender, health status, sport activity performed, etc) and users' opinions about existing infrastructure and planned interventions, designed to promote cycling mobility. Aim of the research was to quantify the increase of physical activity people would have realized in front of an improvement of the specific infrastructures, and the expected positive effects in terms of health. RESULTS: The collected data (343 interviewed in a district of Milan, named "Zona 7") demonstrate that through the implementation of the cycle network, there would be more cyclists to practice the 150 minutes weekly of physical activity recommended by WHO: time spent in cycling, indeed, would increases by 34.4% compared to the current level of cyclability, as detected by our survey. CONCLUSIONS: The investigation confirmed that urban interventions, especially those in small-scale, could play a key role in the promotion of healthy lifestyles, inducing therefore important positive effects on the population health. It was also carried out an application of the WHO "Health Economic Assessment Tool" to evaluate the benefits in terms of Non-Communicable Diseases' reduction, specifically a provisional quantification of deaths saved.


Subject(s)
City Planning , Health Status , Cities , Exercise , Humans , Motor Activity
14.
Ann Ig ; 26(5): 418-25, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25405372

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Debate about sustainable development has reached a peak, as it is now recognized worldwide by public opinion and, in general, by governments' political agendas. New hospitals need to be made more sustainable and existing ones must improve their standards: e.g. in Italy, more than 50% of all healthcare facilities were built before the Nineties, without any attention to environmental, social or economic sustainability. METHODS: Thanks to a sustainability evaluating system (environmental, social and economic) designed by the Milanese University 'Politecnico di Milano', two healthcare facilities were analyzed and compared. Both structures have approximately 600 beds and are located in the Lombardy region but they were built in different decades: one was built in the Sixties while the other one was built very recently. The analysis focused on underlining criticalities, implementing redevelopment measures for sustainability and eventually understanding whether attention was truly being given to those topics. RESULTS: A need to evaluate the sustainability parameters emerged from the comparison between the two case-studies. This is the only way of identifying strategic non-invasive and cheaper solutions that could directly influence sustainability. Following the above-mentioned comparison, a first look - albeit not an adequate one - was given to sustainability aspects. CONCLUSIONS: The assessment tool turned out to be efficient and could also prove effective in resource management and operational planning, whenever applied to any territorial facility.


Subject(s)
Conservation of Natural Resources , Health Facility Environment/standards , Hospital Design and Construction/standards , Hospitals/standards , Humans , Italy
15.
Ann Ig ; 26(5): 447-55, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25405376

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the healthcare environment, nowadays, only a few among the available evaluation systems pay enough attention to certain social sustainability aspects. Among these, humanization plays a key role in an environment, like hospitals, where the mental and physical well-being of patients and healthcare operators is crucial. Our research project, known as 'SustHealth', is focused on the deficiencies of the evaluation methodology and aims at developing an assessment system related to a questionnaire-based investigation capable of revealing the most influential conditions and dynamics in people's hospital experience, while also recommending areas in hospitals where efforts can be made to sustain improvement strategies. METHODS: The humanization of healthcare structures began with a significant investigation to assess all the major evaluation tools in both hospitals - to better understand the physical and emotional interactions in the structure-user ratio - and other areas. This helped understand the strengths and criticalities of the systems that were examined. This first step also allowed to shed light on the most important aspects to keep in mind when developing an evaluation system. During the operational steps an all-new LpCp - tool (Listening to people to Cure people) was created, which includes a questionnaire-based investigation and processing software, and its application for beta-testing in a 600-bed hospital in Milan. RESULTS: The LpCp - tool proved to be effective and capable of finding the deficiencies and potential in the examined hospital. Considering different themes through alternative viewpoints (staff, patients/visitors, technicians, etc.), the tool has allowed underlining different perceptions of the same place and also provided sound information to guide healthcare management in taking informed decisions about specific problems or users. Former interesting results show an inadequate appraisal about e.g. on-site facilities or recreational activities and a lack of perception on existing services by users (e.g. translation, P.R.). CONCLUSIONS: The LpCp - tool was presented to other healthcare centres in Milan for wider-scale testing. Therefore, the LpCp - tool will hopefully increase healthcare companies' responsiveness towards improving comfort and humanization levels in hospitals. Sometimes all that is needed are small and inexpensive actions that often improve a hospital user's experience, and often important services are not used due to a lack of communication and information.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/standards , Hospitals/standards , Humanism , Decision Making , Humans , Italy , Software , Surveys and Questionnaires
16.
Ann Ig ; 26(4): 391-9, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25001128

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The design of hospital environments is determined by functional requirements and technical regulations, as well as numerous protocols, which define the structure and system characteristics that such environments need to achieve. In order to improve people's well-being and the quality of their experience within public hospitals, design elements (soft qualities) are added to those 'necessary' features. The aim of this research has been to experiment a new design process and also to create health care spaces with high environmental quality and capable to meet users' emotional and perceptual needs. METHODS: Such needs were investigated with the help of qualitative research tools and the design criteria for one of these soft qualities - colour - were subsequently defined on the basis of the findings. The colour scheme design for the new San Paolo Hospital Emergency Department in Milan was used as case study. Focus groups were fundamental in defining the project's goals and criteria. RESULTS: The issues raised have led to believe that the proper procedure is not the mere consultation of the users in order to define the goals: users should rather be involved in the whole design process and become co-agents of the choices that determine the environment characteristics, so as to meet the quality requirements identified by the users themselves. CONCLUSIONS: The case study has shown the possibility of developing a designing methodology made by three steps (or operational tools) in which users' groups are involved in the choices, loading to plan the environments where compliance with expectations is already implied and verified by means of the process itself. Thus, the method leads to the creation of soft qualities in Healthcare.


Subject(s)
Health Facility Environment , Hospital Design and Construction , Humans
17.
Ann Ig ; 26(2): 137-43, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24763445

ABSTRACT

Evidence Based Design (EBD) is a scientific analysis methodology that emphasises the use of data acquired in order to influence the design process in hospitals. It measures the physical and psychological effects of the built environment on its users. EBD uses formularization of hypothesis, testing/analyzing and outcome gathering as a framework. The design practice, in general, has always been based on a combination of legal, technical/ functional/ and aesthetical knowledge. This generalization has been shifted to another level after the implementation of EBD. In the last 30 years many case studies were collected which demonstrate the built environment's impact on users. EBD methodology can be applied to any type of building, but it is particularly used to analyze the efficiency of healthcare facilities. The Goal of this paper is to demonstrate various applications of EBD principles in healthcare buildings through case studies concerning: - reduction of infections - reduction of stress on medical staff - improved patient healing In addition to the analysis of case studies, we will also focus on official EBD researches developed by healthcare designers and professionals as "alternative solutions". These alternative "ad hoc" solutions are developed in order to answer EBD research results. The solutions that are developed from the results can answer the real needs of each hospital and improve best technological practice to reduce infection, stress and improve patient comfort. Abroad the EBD research results are studied and used by many contemporary hospital architects to develop new solutions to meet the specific requirements of any hospital project they are currently designing. This procedure demonstrates that for each outcome and key finding, there is always at least one alternative solution and, therefore, the achievement of a new hypothesis, case studies to test/measure and outcome to gather occurs. This repetitive attitude leads to a "virtuous circle" where the development of new samples produces a double- positive effect in both EBD research (in terms of new case studies to analyze) and in EBD lessons for implementation in various hospitals. Through this paper the authors state that the combined effort is needed by EBD practitioners, healthcare architects and hospital managers for the improvement and diffusion of EBD in healthcare, especially in Italy where this methodology is not widely used.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Evidence-Based Practice , Hospital Design and Construction/standards , Facility Design and Construction , Humans , Italy
18.
Ann Ig ; 25(5): 411-8, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24048179

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Sustainability is a broad and debated subject, often difficult to be defined and applied into real projects, especially when dealing with a complex scenario as the one of healthcare. Many research studies and evaluation systems have handled this topic from different perspectives, but many limits and criticalities still have to be overcome to properly cope with actual needs. METHODS: The Sustainable Healthcare project has been developed through three main phases: a deep study of the state of the art, unraveling pros and cons of available sustainability scoring systems; an accurate analysis of the stakeholders network and their needs; the realization of an objective evaluation framework, through scientific methods, as the ANP. RESULTS: The newly developed evaluation system takes into consideration all the three pillars of sustainability, analyzing social, environmental and economic sustainability through a set of criteria, specified by measurable indicators. So the system identifies both global sustainability and specific critical areas, pointing out possible strategic solutions to improve sustainability. The evaluation is achieved through technical analyses and qualitative surveys, which eventually allow to quantitatively assess sustainability, through a sound scoring method. CONCLUSIONS: This study proposes an innovative evaluation method to determine the sustainability of a hospital, already existing or in the design phase, within the European context. The Sustainable Healthcare system overcomes some of the current evaluation systems' limits by establishing a multidisciplinary approach and being an easy-to-use tool. This protocol is intended to be of support in the identification of the main hospital's weaknesses and in setting priorities for implementation of the solutions.


Subject(s)
Decision Support Techniques , Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Program Evaluation , Quality Assurance, Health Care/standards , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Europe , Health Facility Environment/standards , Hospital Design and Construction/standards , Humans , Italy , Program Evaluation/methods , Program Evaluation/standards , Program Evaluation/statistics & numerical data , Program Evaluation/trends , Quality Assurance, Health Care/methods , Quality Improvement , Quality of Health Care
19.
Ann Ig ; 25(2): 151-7, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23471453

ABSTRACT

This paper proposes an innovative and transparent methodology to support the "ASL Milano" (Local Health Agency) in the hygiene and health evaluation of construction projects, in order to highlight their positive and negative performance beyond the requirements imposed by the current laws and regulations regarding buildings' hygiene performance, which are too old and therefore unsuitable to ascertain the real quality of indoor environments. The compliance with laws or regulations, mostly out of date, and the assessment of performance involving only a part of the current emerging needs and problems, in fact, should be considered as a necessary, although not a sufficient step, to ensure high quality indoors. Consequently, it is necessary to identify and test an assessment tool which could provide an effective and flexible support for the development of hygiene and health statements regarding projects at building scale (new construction, conversion of the existing, rehabilitation, extension, change of use, etc). The assessment tool suggested by this paper is tailored for the metropolitan area of the city of Milan, but its evaluation framework could be developed and applied to other contexts.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Indoor/analysis , Facility Design and Construction/standards , Hygiene , Air Pollution, Indoor/legislation & jurisprudence , Air Pollution, Indoor/prevention & control , Construction Industry/legislation & jurisprudence , Construction Industry/standards , Environment Design/standards , Facility Design and Construction/legislation & jurisprudence , Guideline Adherence , Heating/standards , Humans , Hygiene/legislation & jurisprudence , Hygiene/standards , Lighting/standards , Noise , Parking Facilities/standards , Waste Management/standards
20.
Ann Ig ; 24(6): 543-52, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23234192

ABSTRACT

Hospitals are complex buildings because of their articulation, function, organization and technology equipment. Planning hospitals needs an interdisciplinary approach in order to organize efficiently the construction of qualitative and flexible units, that must be able to answer to all the requirements of different users and to the fast changes due to the research innovations. Human and care activities have a rapid progress, that creates a constant demand of modernizations of the hospitals and readjustment of the functional connections. Flexibility becomes the core of all the modifications depending on the progress of the medical science. The future challenge is to build structures that promote sustainable flexibility and also allow to achieve wellness in a synergic relation with complementary external activities. Therefore the research aims to identify lay-out models, technical and constructive solutions to guarantee different levels of flexibility. The research was made of different stages to define flexibility inside healthcare structures using strategies and technologies. The first step has followed the evolution of hospital structures during the centuries. It illustrates the most efficient methods and solutions used in last fifty years to achieve the flexibility. The second step was the analysis of the most important contemporaries healthcare structures. In that analysis, the hospitals will be compared through an evaluation matrix made by diferent flexibility levels that underlines the most efficient technologies and strategies used. At the end it was made a list of design indications focused on the definition of a new design approach that guarantees flexibility for these complex systems.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/standards , Hospital Design and Construction/standards , Hospitals/standards , Efficiency, Organizational , Hospital Design and Construction/trends , Hospitals/trends , Humans , Italy
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