The Wolfson Prize: designing the hospital of the future.
architecture and design
awards and prizes
hospitals
knowledge bases
Journal
Future healthcare journal
ISSN: 2514-6645
Titre abrégé: Future Healthc J
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101711246
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Mar 2023
Mar 2023
Historique:
medline:
3
10
2023
pubmed:
3
10
2023
entrez:
3
10
2023
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
The 2021 Wolfson Economics Prize asked how new hospitals should be designed to radically improve patient experiences, clinical outcomes, staff wellbeing and integration with wider health and social care. With a major programme to rebuild and renew hospitals in England underway, the Prize offered an opportunity to understand current thinking about hospitals and their future place. The 41 submissions that were identified as 'most promising' were reviewed and subjected to framework analysis. Emerging themes were identified and discussed iteratively. Five dominant themes were identified: a calming environment; systems of care; distribution of services; use of technology; and going green. Several tensions and trade-offs were evident across the submissions and a number of gaps were identified in the knowledge base that need to be remedied to ensure that new hospitals are safe and efficient. The previous approach to building new hospitals, with its over-riding drive to reduce costs, has not served the UK well. New ways of thinking about hospital building and design are urgently needed, especially the funding of research and the creation of a national repository devoted to design solutions and post-build evaluations of new hospitals.
Sections du résumé
Background
UNASSIGNED
The 2021 Wolfson Economics Prize asked how new hospitals should be designed to radically improve patient experiences, clinical outcomes, staff wellbeing and integration with wider health and social care. With a major programme to rebuild and renew hospitals in England underway, the Prize offered an opportunity to understand current thinking about hospitals and their future place.
Methods
UNASSIGNED
The 41 submissions that were identified as 'most promising' were reviewed and subjected to framework analysis. Emerging themes were identified and discussed iteratively.
Results
UNASSIGNED
Five dominant themes were identified: a calming environment; systems of care; distribution of services; use of technology; and going green. Several tensions and trade-offs were evident across the submissions and a number of gaps were identified in the knowledge base that need to be remedied to ensure that new hospitals are safe and efficient.
Conclusion
UNASSIGNED
The previous approach to building new hospitals, with its over-riding drive to reduce costs, has not served the UK well. New ways of thinking about hospital building and design are urgently needed, especially the funding of research and the creation of a national repository devoted to design solutions and post-build evaluations of new hospitals.
Identifiants
pubmed: 37786505
doi: 10.7861/fhj.2022-0105
pii: futurehealth
pmc: PMC10538682
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Pagination
27-30Informations de copyright
© Royal College of Physicians 2023. All rights reserved.
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