1. Physical Design Correlates of Efficiency and Safety in Emergency Departments.
- Author
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Pati, Debajyoti, Harvey Jr, Thomas E., and Pati, Sipra
- Subjects
CONTENT analysis ,GROUP decision making ,EMERGENCY medical services ,EMERGENCY nursing ,EMERGENCY physicians ,EXECUTIVES ,GAMES ,HEALTH care teams ,HEALTH facilities ,HOSPITALS ,HOSPITAL building design & construction ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,WORKING hours ,INDUSTRIAL safety ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENT-professional relations ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,PATIENTS ,PATIENT safety ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,MEDICAL triage ,VIDEO recording ,WORK design ,TEAMS in the workplace ,QUALITATIVE research ,JUDGMENT sampling ,WAITING rooms ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
The objective of this study was to explore and identify physical design correlates of safety and efficiency in emergency department (ED) operations. This study adopted an exploratory, multi-measure approach to (1) examine the interactions between ED operations and physical design at 4 sites and (2) identify domains of physical design decision-making that potentially influence efficiency and safety. Multidisciplinary gaming and semistructured interviews were conducted with stakeholders at each site. Study data suggest that 16 domains of physical design decisions influence safety, efficiency, or both. These include (1) entrance and patient waiting, (2) traffic management, (3) subwaiting or internal waiting areas, (4) triage, (5) examination/treatment area configuration, (6) examination/treatment area centralization versus decentralization, (7) examination/treatment room standardization, (8) adequate space, (9) nurse work space, (10) physician work space, (11) adjacencies and access, (12) equipment room, (13) psych room, (14) staff de-stressing room, (15) hallway width, and (16) results waiting area. Safety and efficiency from a physical environment perspective in ED design are mutually reinforcing concepts--enhancing efficiency bears positive implications for safety. Furthermore, safety and security emerged as correlated concepts, with security issues bearing implications for safety, thereby suggesting important associations between safety, security, and efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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