
Flexibility, Focus on Future are Keys to Healthcare Design Success
By Kelly M. Pyrek
Although construction of healthcare facilities in the late 1990s increased,
hospital revenues and inpatient census declined. The reason, according to
California architect Donald McKahan, AIA, has everything to do with the fact
that hospitals and clinics are "retooling their facilities as the
healthcare industry reinvents itself for the future," he writes in the
white paper Healthcare Facilities: Current Trends and Future Forecasts.1
It is possible to have growth without profits, but it is a trend most
administrators obviously hope is a short-term one. In the meantime, healthcare
design professionals are riding a similar roller coaster.
Data from surveys conducted by the American Institute of Architecture (AIA)
chronicles the up-and-down nature of healthcare construction. In 2002, 26
percent of architectural firms serving the healthcare industry generated the
majority of their billings from healthcare projects. This is down from the 1997
firm survey that revealed 30.2 percent of healthcare design firms received the
majority of their billings from healthcare projects.
In 2002, the AIA firm survey found that 12.2 percent of billings across the
entire architecture industry were from healthcare projects. This is up from 12
percent of billings in 1997.
Healthy profit margins frequently are built with lumber and nails, and the
inextricable relationship between clinical technology and healthcare design and
construction has its origins in the 1940s and 1950s, experts say, when the
growth of services was triggered by the needs of the post-war populace. Every
decade since has deepened the co-dependency one component has on the other. In
the 1960s and 1970s, the rapidly evolving breakthroughs in medical technologies
-- including transplantation, microsurgery and synthetic antibiotics -- were
matched by new communications and materials management infrastructures. In the
1980s, clinical advances were consistently made, although U.S. healthcare
underwent significant cost-cutting. The 1990s were characterized by reducing the
length of stay, moving to the outpatient setting and creating spaces that
supported patient-centered care.
"Based on the exponential changes in clinical services, operational
trends and new technologies, it is not surprising that many facilities, hailed
as state of the art 20 or even 10 years ago, are becoming functionally obsolete
long before their physical life is spent," according to a group of Canadian
architects.2 Healthcare facilities of the past were static,
institutional and forbidding places; facilities of the future, they say, are
fluid, friendly, and above all, flexible and able to accommodate clinical,
technological and people-driven changes to spatial needs. They identify the
following trends:
- Continued clinical advances that encourage mobility and minimally invasive
surgeries
- Increased acuity of inpatient and outpatients
- Expansion of outpatient clinics and the creation of ambulatory
"themes" through selective clustering
- Increased recognition of the family/caregiver's contribution to the
healing process
- Gradual acceptance of the benefits of non-traditional modes of therapy
- Increased awareness on the part of healthcare consumers and a taste for
the latest in diagnostic techniques and treatments, as well as increased
point-of-care diagnostic treatment
- Increased clinical research integrated into patient-care settings
- Increased emphasis on patient education in the healthcare facility setting
Healthcare architects today are criticizing outdated design solutions that
"compromised our abilities to respond to changes in how we work and deliver
services; too many solid walls that limit our ability to connect visually and
acoustically with our patients and colleagues, floor plans that are too narrow
to allow for appropriate relationships; floor-to-floor heights that limit our
ability to maintain current standards for air handling and electrical systems
and to accommodate some of the new pieces of high-tech equipment; and building
sites that do not permit the expansion and renewal that is essential for today's
and tomorrow's healthcare system."2
"Design mistakes that have been made in the past include not making the
pre-operative area and the actual patient area not private enough, not large
enough and not inviting enough," says Richard L. Miller, FAIA, principal in
charge and president of Tennessee-based Earl Swensson Associates, Inc. "As
procedures have become more complicated, with more surgical and nursing staff
involved, we started with some rooms that, in retrospect, are inadequate. They
might have worked for that time and place, but as the center evolves, these
rooms don't. Everyone wants to squeeze space as much as possible because space
is costly, but there are some minimums you shouldn't go below."
Miller is a proponent of keeping future growth needs at the forefront of the
design. "If in the original plans there was no prior thought as to how a
facility could be expanded, it can be quite a challenge to meet new demands for
capacity," he says. "Whenever you build, you should think about future
expansion. A client of ours in Nashville started with four operating rooms; we
knew there was potential to grow to eight ORs so we actually preplanned and did
a drawing that reflects how the facility could expand in the future. It was a
concept that rippled through pre-op, holding, recovery and support areas."
In keeping with this kind of imperative, healthcare design and construction
professionals are challenged to "anticipate, to the greatest degree, where
changes are most likely to occur and to consider flexibility throughout all
stages of the planning, design, construction and post-occupancy phases to ensure
that the ultimate goals of client satisfaction, desirable clinical outcomes,
efficient work environment and effective use of limited capital dollars are
achieved."2
Healthcare design professionals say that when carefully crafted, a facility
strategic plan can become "a dynamic solution that solves your current
demands, responds to your changing needs and welcomes the future for the next
generation."2 This plan also must be fluid enough to anticipate
changes in technology, demographics, care-delivery models and new opportunities.
Having said that, Chefurka2 asks, "Do we manage our way through
changing service demands or design our way out of them?" and "Do
current trends create opportunities or barriers?" Maintaining flexibility,
design experts say, should be the common thread throughout the entire design and
construction process.
Master planning is the first and one of the most important steps toward
realization of a healthcare facility. Painted in broad brushstrokes, the master
plan addresses space requirements such as the adequacy of the site to
accommodate the anticipated use; its location relative to the patient population
the facility will serve; and its size relative to its ability to respond to
internal and external factors that trigger the need for expansion.
Chefurka says that when in the master planning phase, the following should be
considered:
- Will the facility be a single building or a healthcare campus?
- Does the facility accommodate important support services such as materials
management and inventory, laundry or food services?
- Does the facility accommodate service growth and change, such as including
imaging services at a future date or going "paperless" and
requiring less storage space?
- Does the facility support vertical or horizontal expansion within current
zoning considerations?
- How will the facility construction be phased to accommodate municipal site
services (utilities) that affect project infrastructure?
Keeping important trends, socio-economic factors and clinical imperatives in
mind when crafting a master plan for a healthcare facility is essential, says
Miller, who is co-author of Hospital and Healthcare Facility Design. One
such trend "he says" is how outpatient facilities have influenced
inpatient modalities.
"Many of the outpatient modes have influenced what we do with inpatient
design," Miller adds. "The No. 1 thing we set out to do, with the
client's approval, is de-institutionalize the experience for healthcare
consumers. Patient-centered care -- a trend that started in OB/GYN departments
and practices prior to outpatient care -- had a strong influence on what has
rippled through the entire healthcare industry. Being patient-friendly and
family-friendly is vital to the design planning process. If you can create the
healing atmosphere from the moment the patient approaches the facility and
continue it inside and out, you have come a long way toward improving the
wellness and recovery process."
In his book, Miller defines and outlines this paradigm shift from a
provider-centered system to a consumer-centered system that has had a profound
effect on "shaping the emerging social and technological climate in which
architects, healthcare and hospital administrators and planners, healthcare
providers and public policy makers must collaborate to create healthcare
facilities with quality, cost-effectiveness and flexibility sufficient to carry
them through the 21st century."3
"Outpatient facilities are at the forefront of this paradigm shift, but
really, evolution in reimbursement started the revolution -- giving a patient
some choice in where and how he or she received healthcare -- has changed
everything," Miller says. "There are healthcare facilities being
designed these days that are so far from the old model that you would never
think you are in a medical facility."
One example of how outpatient facilities are changing healthcare design
principles is in the way high volumes of patient traffic and rapid operating
room turnaround times are handled.
"The patient's movement through the healthcare facility is important to
the design process. Architects try to avoid cross traffic. The patient enters
the facility, is taken logically to the next step and prepped, brought in for
the procedure and brought back for recovery and post-operative care. We refer to
it as a pure loop, where you begin and end but you have never crossed your own
path. This kind of loop also maximizes staffing efficiency, since patients come
in the front door, cycle through the surgery center and are served by the same
caregiver."
It seems that patients and clinicians are looking for the same kind of
convenience, another big factor in healthcare design of today.
"In an inpatient setting, surgery is within the depths of the
hospital," says H. Ralph Hawkins, president of the Academy of Architecture
for Health within the American Institute of Architecture and a principal of
Texas-based design firm HKS Incorporated. "Many newer healthcare
facilities, both inpatient and outpatient, are trying to provide a public
'storefront' of sorts for better accessibility. This is a concept that was
created within the outpatient setting and borrowed by inpatient hospitals. Both
surgeons and patients like not having to go through the bowels of a large
institution."
The storefront concept is part of the consumer-oriented approach to
healthcare, Hawkins says, adding that creativity of design is more important
that ever.
"Healthcare consumers and healthcare providers alike are more aware of
the storefront value of these facilities," Hawkins states. "Healthcare
providers want healthcare consumers to remember and like their facilities. In a
way, healthcare facilities are destination-oriented; if healthcare consumers
say, 'What a cool-looking building,' they will remember it, so much so that
architecture almost has become a brand image for surgery centers."
Having to correct the sins of their design fathers, many healthcare
facilities are being forced to renovate and retrofit their existing buildings,
Miller says. "Not only are we seeing a lot of surgery centers having to
renovate, we also see retrofitting in existing hospitals to create a surgery
center within the hospital. That can be a significant challenge. Just by virtue
of where these places are located within a hospital it can be very difficult to
create an inviting, easy-access entry, and how do you combat the obviously more
institutional atmosphere that surrounds the new outpatient center? You can do it
design-wise with finish and color but what I have often heard argued is you
can't take the hospital mentality out of the hospital-affiliated outpatient
surgery center. That is an operational issue, not a design issue, but they do go
hand in hand."
That's why many facilities are choosing to build ambulatory care campuses,
preferring to build horizontally and outward, instead of vertically and inward.
Miller says the concept of a healthcare village addresses the need for
proximity, convenience and resource sharing. Hybrid facilities tend to be a key
component of these campuses.
"You can have outpatient projects that happen to have inpatient beds;
and then you can have outpatient projects that have everything but beds,"
Miller explains. "They both serve many of the same functions. We have a
project in Collierville, Tenn. that is a hospital with 50 beds but it is really
an outpatient setting. It combines physician office space, inpatient beds and
all the outpatient features that touch what is almost an outdoor mall, so the
whole experience unfolds for the healthcare consumer. Another project of ours
began as a physician's office space but didn't have surgery; it incorporated
cancer treatment, radiation and chemotherapy; it had rehab, holistic medicine,
women-specific services and operating suites, so here's a 320,000-square-foot
building that doesn't have one bed in it. Each project serves the same purpose,
and you could add beds to the one that doesn't have them. The healthcare village
is an interesting phenomenon because these campuses combine so many modalities
in a like environment. It's perfect for physicians because everything is
adjacent to where they work and it's convenient for the caregiver, patient and
family."
Robert Marasco, president of medical design firm Marasco & Associates and
partner in the ASC Group, points to a client, Idaho Falls Surgical Hospital, as
an example of how healthcare campuses can include interesting hybrid facilities.
"This project sandwiched a surgical hospital between the most dominant
OB/GYN and orthopedic practice in town," Marasco explains. "Patients
can move into the hospital through these practices or they can enter the
hospital directly. This kind of project often is one of the first steps in
creating a healthcare village. The facility opened a few months ago and when it
becomes successful we will put up a medical office building next to the surgical
hospital; the people who fill that building are small practices that can use the
hospital's imaging, physical therapy and surgical departments, so it becomes an
entity that grows together. The next step in the healthcare village is creating
commercial spaces in those buildings, such as having maternity clothing outlets
near the OB/GYN, or health food outlets and medical spas."
Marasco says land and space issues are critical to the creation of healthcare
villages. "The Idaho Falls project could probably sit on four acres of land
but instead we have 20 acres. I think docs short themselves because they don't
realize they are going to be successful; they build on lots that are not
adequate in size. Usually you have four square feet of land per square foot of
building; the land costs are significant but it is often cheaper to buy more
land and let it sit there than it is to move your building because you don't
have space to expand."
Despite the gradual growth of medical villages that could swallow up the
surgery center's visibility, ASCs still serve as the engine for many healthcare
campuses.
"It took about 15 years for 3,000 surgery centers to come into their
own," Marasco says. "I think this will double in the next three years.
But we need to be as active in the market as possible in the next three years
because I think it is going to taper off gradually. But the reasons for surgery
centers' popularity will still exist. Physicians want to practice medicine but
they can't generate enough income off of their professional fees to be able to
pay for additional expenses such as skyrocketing malpractice insurance. So the
smart guys say, 'I have to find a way to take every action in medicine and make
it pay off for me.' But every time they show up at the hospital, all of the
money goes to the hospital. The easiest thing to do to combat that right now is
start a surgery center. I don't know if there are more projects out there but
our problem is not finding leads to build these centers, it's ranking those
leads so we do the best projects. The opportunities are vast."
One important trend is the growth of surgical hospitals from surgery centers,
a risk that should be calculated carefully, Marasco cautions.
"Surgical hospitals should be designed in a linear fashion,"
Marasco adds. "I think a surgical hospital probably should not start out as
a surgical hospital. It should start as a surgery center. But a surgery center
should be designed to hospital standards. I'd like to see them be in business a
few years, make a profit and make sure their systems work, and then become a
surgical hospital by adding beds. Whenever you do a surgery center the biggest
mystery is making sure the caseloads physicians say they say will bring to the
center actually show up. If you open the facility as a phase-one surgery center
and the cases come, then it is very easy to determine how much more caseload you
will get if you convert to a surgical hospital. If the cases don't come, you
stay as a surgery center. It does cost more money to design an ambulatory
surgery center to a surgical hospital standard, and there are some different
criteria -- spaces you need to have or not have or areas that need to be bigger
-- but it pays off."
That payoff can come from anticipating caseload growth and the resulting need
for more space that in turn leads to higher profits.
"If my expenses in a surgery center or surgical hospital are rent,
equipment, staff and supplies, the reality is, the smallest of those four items
is rent or the cost of the building, so it doesn't hurt you much to build
bigger," Marasco says. "I am not saying to build a bunch of ORs you
don't need; but build the facility a little bigger so it can move to surgical
hospital status down the road. That's probably money very well spent. There's no
question surgical hospitals are more expensive and more risky because you have
to deal with beds. But the rewards can be greater, too."
| References:
1. McKahan D. Healthcare Facilities: Current Trends and Future
Forecasts. www.aia.org
2. Chefurka T, Nesdoly F and Christie J. Concepts of Flexibility in
Healthcare Facility Planning, Design and Construction. www.muhc.mcgill.ca/healing.
3. Miller RL and Swensson ES. Hospital and Healthcare Facility Design.
2nd edition. W.W. Norton & Co.: New York. Page 20. |
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