37 results on '"Zimring C"'
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2. The Design of a Tool Kit for Case-Based Design AIDS
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Domeshek, E. A., Kolodner, J. L., Zimring, C. M., Gero, John S., editor, and Sudweeks, Fay, editor
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- 1994
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3. REGULATION OF IMMUNE RESPONSES BY RBC TRANSFUSION: 3A-S17-01
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Zimring, C
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- 2013
4. Avoiding design errors: a case study of redesigning an architectural studi o
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Lee, G., Eastman, C.M., and Zimring, C.
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- 2003
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5. The Sanitary City: Environmental Services in Urban America from Colonial Times to the Present. By Martin V. Melosi. Abridged edition. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2008. xii + 354 pp. Illustrations, tables, notes, bibliography, and index. Cloth $27.95
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Zimring, C. A., primary
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- 2009
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6. David N. Pellow. Garbage Wars: The Struggle for Environmental Justice in Chicago. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2002. ix + 234 pp. ISBN 0-262-16212-1, $24.95
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Zimring, C., primary
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- 2003
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7. Case-based design support: a case study in architectural design
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Pearce, M., primary, Goel, A.K., additional, Kolodner, I.L., additional, Zimring, C., additional, Sentosa, L., additional, and Billington, R., additional
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- 1992
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8. Finally "deliberate by design": milestones in the delivery of health care for U.S. military family members.
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Callahan CW, Zimring C, Callahan, Charles W, and Zimring, Craig
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The development of medical care for U.S. military families and retirees was serendipitous, a fortunate accident. The formal development of military family medical care required the evolution of three factors: the emergence of a standing army, frontiers to guard, and a peace to defend. These factors were first realized in the late 19th Century, and beginning at that point in U.S. history, seven key years highlight major milestones in the history of military family member medical care. At the same time, these years exemplify changing ideas of disease and of health care and how the physical design of clinics and hospitals reflects and impacts these ideas. The Fort Belvoir Community Hospital, which opens in 2011, exemplifies the Nation's best example of green hospital construction, patient and family centered care, and evidence-based design in a Culture of Excellence that demonstrates that military family medical care is finally "deliberate by design." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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9. Presence and visability of outdoor and indoor physical activity features and participation in physical activity among older adults in retirement communities.
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Joseph A, Zimring C, Harris-Kojetin L, and Kiefer K
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In this paper we examine how the presence and visibility of outdoor and indoor physical activity resources (e.g., walking path/ trail, outdoor tennis courts, gardens, etc.) influences participation in physical activity among elderly residents in non-profit continuing care retirement communities and other senior housing communities. This paper reports findings from a survey of 800 such communities. A social ecological model was used to study the relationships between the environment and physical activity behavior. A fifty-two percent response rate (n = 398) was obtained. Campuses with more attractive outdoor and indoor physical activity facilities had more residents participating in different types of physical activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
10. Support for collaborative design reasoning in shared virtual spaces
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Craig, D. L. and Zimring, C.
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- 2002
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11. CoOL Studio: using simple tools to expand the discursive space of the design studio
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Zimring, C., Khan, S., Craig, D., Haq, S. u., and Guzdial, M.
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- 2001
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12. Multidimensional Environmental Factors and Sleep Health for Aging Adults: A Focused Narrative Review.
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Yang E, Ismail A, Kim Y, Erdogmus E, Boron J, Goldstein F, DuBose J, and Zimring C
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- Sleep, Quality of Life, Residence Characteristics
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The timing, amount, and quality of sleep are critical for an individual's health and quality of life. This paper provides a focused narrative review of the existing literature around multidimensional environments and sleep health for aging adults. Five electronic databases, Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed/Medline; EBSCOhost, PsycINFO (ProQuest), and Google Scholar yielded 54,502 total records. After removing duplicates, non-peer reviewed academic articles, and nonrelevant articles, 70 were included for review. We were able to categorize environmental factors into housing security, home environment, and neighborhood environment, and, within each environmental category, specific elements/aspects are discussed. This paper provides a comprehensive map connecting identified levels of influence (individual, home/house, and neighborhood-level) in which subfactors are listed under each level of influence/category with the related literature list. Our review highlights that multidimensional environmental factors can affect aging adults' sleep health and eventually their physical, mental, and cognitive health and that sleep disparities exist in racial minorities in socioeconomically disadvantaged communities in which cumulative environmental stressors coexist. Based on this focused narrative review on the multidimensional sleep environments for aging adults, knowledge gaps are identified, and future research directions are suggested.
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- 2022
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13. Placing Users at the Center: Evaluating Exam Room Design for Improved User Experience.
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Matić Z, Oh Y, Lim L, and Zimring C
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- Humans, Primary Health Care, Environment Design, Health Facility Environment, Health Personnel
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Objective: This article proposes a method for evaluating the design affordances of primary care exam rooms from the perspectives of users using functional scenario (FS) analysis., Goal: This study aims to develop quantifiable criteria and spatial metrics for evaluating how exam room design supports the needs of different users. These criteria and metrics can be used in the early stages of the design process to choose between alternatives., Background: The primary care exam room is an essential space in healthcare, as it is the first point of contact between the healthcare provider and the patient. However, there is a lack of rigorous evaluation metrics for exam room design that supports improved user experiences and better health outcomes., Method: A total of nine primary care exam rooms were analyzed using FS analysis. We identified three key user groups involved in the clinical examination process-providers, patients, and care partners-and translated their needs into FSs. We developed spatial metrics for each FS to quantify the extent to which the needs were spatially supported., Results: We developed 11 FSs in total: three from the providers', five from the patients', and three from the care partners' perspectives. The results revealed possible design strategies for improved user experiences., Conclusions: We quantitatively measured the affordance of primary care exam room design for multiple stakeholders. We expect that the criteria and metrics presented in this article will improve the understanding of different users' perspectives and provide new design guidance for improved user experiences.
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- 2022
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14. Lighting the Patient Room of the Future: Evaluating Different Lighting Conditions From the Patient Perspective.
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DuBose J, Davis RG, Campiglia G, Wilkerson A, and Zimring C
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- Humans, Temperature, Lighting, Patients' Rooms
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Objective: This study explores whether "future" lighting systems that provide greater control and opportunity for circadian synchronization are acceptable to participants in the role of patients., Background: Tunable, dimmable light emitting diode systems provide multiple potential benefits for healthcare. They can provide significant energy savings, support circadian synchronization by varying the spectrum and intensity of light over the course of the day, address nighttime navigation needs, and provide user-friendly control. There is an emerging understanding of the important visual and nonvisual effects of light; however, important questions remain about the experience and acceptability of this "future" lighting if we are to adopt it broadly., Methods: Volunteer participants (34) performed a series of tasks typical of patients, such as reading or watching a video, in a full-scale simulated inpatient room. Each participant conducted these tasks under 12 lighting conditions in a counterbalanced order that included varying illuminance levels, correlated color temperatures (CCTs), and in a few conditions, saturated colors. The participants rated each lighting condition on comfort, intensity, appropriateness, and naturalness., Results and Conclusions: The participants found that conditions with CCTs of 5,000 K and higher were significantly less comfortable and less natural than conditions with lower CCTs. Conditions with lighting distributed in multiple zones in the patient room were viewed more favorably than a traditional overbed configuration. The participants in this simulated patient study reacted negatively to colored lighting on the footwall of the room but found a mixture of warmer and cooler luminaire CCTs acceptable.
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- 2022
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15. Playful strategies to foster the well-being of pediatric cancer patients in the Brazilian Unified Health System: a design thinking approach.
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Tonetto LM, da Rosa VM, Brust-Renck P, Denham M, da Rosa PM, Zimring C, Albanti I, and Lehmann L
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Child, Communication, Humans, Pain, Family, Neoplasms therapy
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Background: Cancer care can negatively impact children's subjective well-being. In this research, well-being refers to patients' self-perception and encompasses their hospital and care delivery assessment. Playful strategies can stimulate treatment compliance and have been used to provide psychosocial support and health education; they can involve gamification, virtual reality, robotics, and healthcare environments. This study aims to identify how playfulness, whenever applicable, can be used as a strategy to improve the subjective well-being of pediatric cancer patients in the Brazilian Unified Health System., Methods: Sixteen volunteers with experience in pediatric oncology participated in the study. They were physicians, psychologists, child life specialists, and design thinking professionals. They engaged in design thinking workshops to propose playful strategies to improve the well-being of pediatric cancer patients in the Brazilian Unified Health System. Data collection consisted of participatory observations. All activities were video recorded and analyzed through Thematic Analysis. The content generated by the volunteers was classified into two categories: impact of cancer care on children's self-perception and children's perceptions of the hospital and the care delivery., Results: Volunteers developed strategies to help children deal with time at the hospital, hospital structure, and care delivery. Such strategies are not limited to using playfulness as a way of "having fun"; they privilege ludic interfaces, such as toys, to support psychosocial care and health education. They aim to address cancer and develop communication across families and staff in a humanized manner, educate families about the disease, and design children-friendly environments. Volunteers also generated strategies to help children cope with perceptions of death, pain, and their bodies. Such strategies aim to support understanding the meaning of life and death, comprehend pain beyond physicality, help re-signify cancer and children's changing bodies, and give patients active voices during the treatment., Conclusions: The paper proposes strategies that can improve the well-being of pediatric cancer patients in the Brazilian Unified Health System. Such strategies connect children's experiences as inpatients and outpatients and may inform the implementation of similar projects in other developing countries., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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16. The impact of clinic design on teamwork development in primary care.
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Stroebel RJ, Obeidat B, Lim L, Mitchell JD, Jasperson DB, and Zimring C
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Background: Traditional clinic design supports a high-volume, hierarchical practice model. New design models are evolving to foster a high-functioning team delivery model., Purpose: The goal of this study was to determine whether new design models, specifically colocation, improve care team development., Methodology/approach: A quasi-experimental design was used in this study to obtain validated teamwork development scores and patient satisfaction data to compare clinic design models. We took advantage of a difference in designs of primary care clinics among several clinics within the same care system in the Upper Midwest region of the United States. The participants were staff members of the primary care delivery teams in the studied clinics. The intervention was a redesign of staff space in the clinic. Our measures included a validated measure of team development and a commonly used patient satisfaction tool that were both in use at our institution at the time of the study., Results: Teamwork scores were significantly higher in clinics where the primary work space of the entire team was colocated than in clinics where providers were in spaces separate from other team members. The differences in scores held across team roles, including providers, registered nurses, and licensed practical nurses. Patient satisfaction was not different., Conclusion: Colocation in clinic design appears to have a significant impact on team development across primary care team member roles., Practice Implications: Primary care practice leaders should consider colocated clinic designs if their goal is to optimize care team development in support of team-based care delivery models. A more precise understanding of colocation that includes aspects such as distance to and visibility to teammates might help improve design in the future., (Copyright © 2019 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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17. Lighting the Patient Room of the Future: Evaluating Different Lighting Conditions for Performing Typical Nursing Tasks.
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Graves E, Davis RG, DuBose J, Campiglia GC, Wilkerson A, and Zimring C
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- Hospitals, Humans, Lighting, Patient Care, Nursing Staff, Hospital, Patients' Rooms
- Abstract
Purpose: This study explores how aspects of lighting in patient rooms are experienced and evaluated by nurses while performing simulated work under various lighting conditions. The lighting conditions studied represent design standards consistent with different environments of care-traditional, contemporary, and future., Background: Recent advances in lighting research and technology create opportunities to use lighting in hospital rooms to improve everyday experience and provide researchers with opportunities to explore a new set of research questions about the effects of lighting on patients, guests, and staff. This study focuses on the experience of nurses delivering simulated patient care., Method: Perceptions of each of the 13 lighting conditions were evaluated by nurses using rating scales for difficulty of task completion, comfort, intensity, appropriateness of the lighting color, and naturalness of the lighting during the task. The nurses' ratings were analyzed alongside qualitative reflections to provide insight into their responses., Results: Significant differences were found for several a priori hypotheses. Interesting findings provide insight into lighting to support circadian synchronization, lighting at night, the distribution of light in the patient room and the use of multiple lighting zones, and the use of colored lighting., Conclusion: The results of this study provide insight into potential benefits and concerns of these new features for patient room lighting systems and reveal gaps in the existing evidence base that can inform future investigations.
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- 2021
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18. Variability in the Duration and Thoroughness of Hand Hygiene.
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Mumma JM, Durso FT, Casanova LM, Erukunuakpor K, Kraft CS, Ray SM, Shane AL, Walsh VL, Shah PY, Zimring C, DuBose J, and Jacob JT
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- Containment of Biohazards, Ergonomics, Georgia, Guideline Adherence, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola prevention & control, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola transmission, Hospitals, Humans, Infection Control methods, Retrospective Studies, Cross Infection prevention & control, Hand Hygiene statistics & numerical data, Health Personnel statistics & numerical data, Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional prevention & control, Personal Protective Equipment
- Abstract
We observed 354 hand hygiene instances across 41 healthcare workers doffing personal protective equipment at 4 hospital-based biocontainment units. We measured the duration and thoroughness of each hand hygiene instance. Both parameters varied substantially, with systematic differences between hospitals and differences between healthcare workers accounting for much of the variance., (© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2019
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19. Common Behaviors and Faults When Doffing Personal Protective Equipment for Patients With Serious Communicable Diseases.
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Mumma JM, Durso FT, Casanova LM, Erukunuakpor K, Kraft CS, Ray SM, Shane AL, Walsh VL, Shah PY, Zimring C, DuBose J, and Jacob JT
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- Georgia, Gloves, Protective, Hand Hygiene methods, Hand Hygiene standards, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola transmission, Humans, Occupational Health, Respiratory Protective Devices, Risk Assessment, Simulation Training, Health Personnel, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola prevention & control, Infection Control instrumentation, Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional prevention & control, Personal Protective Equipment
- Abstract
Background: The safe removal of personal protective equipment (PPE) can limit transmission of serious communicable diseases, but this process poses challenges to healthcare workers (HCWs)., Methods: We observed 41 HCWs across 4 Ebola treatment centers in Georgia doffing PPE for simulated patients with serious communicable diseases. Using human factors methodologies, we obtained the details, sequences, and durations of doffing steps; identified the ways each step can fail (failure modes [FMs]); quantified the riskiness of FMs; and characterized the workload of doffing steps., Results: Eight doffing steps were common to all hospitals-removal of boot covers, gloves (outer and inner pairs), the outermost garment, the powered air purifying respirator (PAPR) hood, and the PAPR helmet assembly; repeated hand hygiene (eg, with hand sanitizer); and a final handwashing with soap and water. Across hospitals, we identified 256 FMs during the common doffing steps, 61 of which comprised 19 common FMs. Most of these common FMs were above average in their riskiness at each hospital. At all hospitals, hand hygiene, removal of the outermost garment, and removal of boot covers were above average in their overall riskiness. Measurements of workload revealed that doffing steps were often mentally demanding, and this facet of workload correlated most strongly with the effortfulness of a doffing step., Conclusions: We systematically identified common points of concern in protocols for doffing high-level PPE. Addressing FMs related to hand hygiene and the removal of the outermost garment, boot covers, and PAPR hood could improve HCW safety when doffing high-level PPE.We identified ways that doffing protocols for high-level personal protective equipment may fail to protect healthcare workers. Hand hygiene, removing the outermost garment, boot covers, and respirator hood harbored the greatest risk and failed in similar ways across different hospitals., (© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2019
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20. Exploring the Relationships Between Patient Room Layout and Patient Satisfaction.
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MacAllister L, Zimring C, and Ryherd E
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- Academic Medical Centers statistics & numerical data, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Beds, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nursing Stations standards, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Hospital Design and Construction standards, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data, Patients' Rooms standards
- Abstract
This retrospective, exploratory study examined 8,366 patient responses to surveys on patient satisfaction and patient room spatial layout in a large academic teaching hospital consisting of 17 nursing units and 382 patient rooms. This study included four spatial measures: average distance to the nurse station, room handedness, location of bed, and location of first encounter-and explored their statistical associations with two types of patient satisfaction surveys (Hospital Consumer Assessment of the Healthcare Provider and Systems and third party). The study had two phases: a preliminary study of 3,751 patient respondents in a limited diagnosis-related group (DRG) over 5 years and a general study of 4,615 patient respondents with a broader range of DRG's over 2 different years from the preliminary study. Findings indicated statistically significant relationships between all four spatial layout measures and specific survey questions pertaining to perception of nursing, physician, individual care, and overall room environment. Results emphasize the importance of hospital design-and spatial layout in particular-on patient satisfaction.
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- 2019
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21. Assessing Viral Transfer During Doffing of Ebola-Level Personal Protective Equipment in a Biocontainment Unit.
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Casanova LM, Erukunuakpor K, Kraft CS, Mumma JM, Durso FT, Ferguson AN, Gipson CL, Walsh VL, Zimring C, DuBose J, and Jacob JT
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- Containment of Biohazards instrumentation, Containment of Biohazards methods, Hand virology, Hand Hygiene methods, Health Personnel, Humans, Occupational Health standards, Skin virology, Containment of Biohazards standards, Gloves, Protective virology, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola prevention & control, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola transmission, Personal Protective Equipment standards
- Abstract
Background: Personal protective equipment (PPE) protects healthcare workers (HCWs) caring for patients with Ebola virus disease (EVD), and PPE doffing is a critical point for preventing viral self-contamination. We assessed contamination of skin, gloves, and scrubs after doffing Ebola-level PPE contaminated with surrogate viruses: bacteriophages MS2 and Φ6., Methods: In a medical biocontainment unit, HCWs (n = 10) experienced in EVD care donned and doffed PPE following unit protocols that incorporate trained observer guidance and alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR). A mixture of Φ6 (enveloped), MS2 (nonenveloped), and fluorescent marker was applied to 4 PPE sites, approximating body fluid viral load (Φ6, 105; MS2, 106). They performed a patient care task, then doffed. Inner gloves, face, hands, and scrubs were sampled for virus, as were environmental sites with visible fluorescent marker., Results: Among 10 HCWs there was no Φ6 transfer to inner gloves, hands, or face; 1 participant had Φ6 on scrubs at low levels (1.4 × 102). MS2 transfer (range, 101-106) was observed to scrubs (n = 2), hands (n = 1), and inner gloves (n = 7), where it was highest. Most (n = 8) had only 1 positive site. Environmental samples with visible fluorescent marker (n = 21) were negative., Conclusions: Among experienced HCWs, structured, observed doffing using ABHR protected against hand contamination with enveloped virus. Nonenveloped virus was infrequent on hands and scrubs but common on inner gloves, suggesting that inner gloves, but not necessarily ABHR, protect against hand contamination. Optimizing doffing protocols to protect against all types of viruses may require reinforcing careful handling of scrubs and good glove/hand hygiene with effective agents.
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- 2018
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22. Human Factors Risk Analyses of a Doffing Protocol for Ebola-Level Personal Protective Equipment: Mapping Errors to Contamination.
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Mumma JM, Durso FT, Ferguson AN, Gipson CL, Casanova L, Erukunuakpor K, Kraft CS, Walsh VL, Zimring C, DuBose J, and Jacob JT
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- Containment of Biohazards instrumentation, Containment of Biohazards methods, Hand Hygiene, Health Personnel statistics & numerical data, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola prevention & control, Humans, Occupational Health standards, Personal Protective Equipment standards, Respiratory Protective Devices, Risk Assessment, Containment of Biohazards standards, Equipment Contamination, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola transmission, Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional prevention & control, Personal Protective Equipment virology
- Abstract
Background: Doffing protocols for personal protective equipment (PPE) are critical for keeping healthcare workers (HCWs) safe during care of patients with Ebola virus disease. We assessed the relationship between errors and self-contamination during doffing., Methods: Eleven HCWs experienced with doffing Ebola-level PPE participated in simulations in which HCWs donned PPE marked with surrogate viruses (ɸ6 and MS2), completed a clinical task, and were assessed for contamination after doffing. Simulations were video recorded, and a failure modes and effects analysis and fault tree analyses were performed to identify errors during doffing, quantify their risk (risk index), and predict contamination data., Results: Fifty-one types of errors were identified, many having the potential to spread contamination. Hand hygiene and removing the powered air purifying respirator (PAPR) hood had the highest total risk indexes (111 and 70, respectively) and number of types of errors (9 and 13, respectively). ɸ6 was detected on 10% of scrubs and the fault tree predicted a 10.4% contamination rate, likely occurring when the PAPR hood inadvertently contacted scrubs during removal. MS2 was detected on 10% of hands, 20% of scrubs, and 70% of inner gloves and the predicted rates were 7.3%, 19.4%, 73.4%, respectively. Fault trees for MS2 and ɸ6 contamination suggested similar pathways., Conclusions: Ebola-level PPE can both protect and put HCWs at risk for self-contamination throughout the doffing process, even among experienced HCWs doffing with a trained observer. Human factors methodologies can identify error-prone steps, delineate the relationship between errors and self-contamination, and suggest remediation strategies.
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- 2018
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23. Environmental Variables That Influence Patient Satisfaction: A Review of the Literature.
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MacAllister L, Zimring C, and Ryherd E
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- Hospital Design and Construction, Hospitals, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Workforce, Health Facility Environment, Patient Satisfaction, Patients psychology
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Patient's perception of care-referred to as patient satisfaction-is of great interest in the healthcare industry, as it becomes more directly tied to the revenue of the health system providers. The perception of care has now become important in addition to the actual health outcome of the patient. The known influencers for the patient perception of care are the patient's own characteristics as well as the quality of service received. In patient surveys, the physical environment is noted as important for being clean and quiet but is not considered a critical part of patient satisfaction or other health outcomes. Patient perception of care is currently measured as patient satisfaction, a systematic collection of perceptions of social interactions from an individual person as well as their interaction with the environment. This exploration of the literature intends to explore the rigorous, statistically tested research conducted that has a spatial predictor variable and a health or behavior outcome, with the intent to begin to further test the relationships of these variables in the future studies. This literature review uses the patient satisfaction framework of components of influence and identifies at least 10 known spatial environmental variables that have been shown to have a direct connection to the health and behavior outcome of a patient. The results show that there are certain features of the spatial layout and environmental design in hospital or work settings that influence outcomes and should be noted in the future research., (© The Author(s) 2016.)
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- 2016
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24. Design to Improve Visibility: Impact of Corridor Width and Unit Shape.
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Hadi K and Zimring C
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- Humans, Nurse-Patient Relations, Nursing Staff, Hospital, Nursing Stations, Patients' Rooms, Hospital Design and Construction methods, Intensive Care Units standards
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Objective: This study analyzes 10 intensive care units (ICUs) to understand the associations between design features of space layout and nurse-to-patient visibility parameters., Background: Previous studies have explored how different hospital units vary in their visibility relations and how such varied visibility relations result in different nurse behaviors toward patients. However, more limited research has examined the specific design attributes of the layouts that determine the varied visibility relations in the unit. Changes in size, geometry, or other attributes of design elements in nursing units, which might affect patient observation opportunities, require more research., Methods: This article reviews the literature to indicate evidence for the impact of hospital unit design on nurse/patient visibility relations and to identify design parameters shown to affect visibility. It further focuses on 10 ICUs to investigate how different layouts diverge regarding their visibility relations using a set of metrics developed by other researchers. Shape geometry and corridor width, as two selected design features, are compared., Results: Corridor width and shape characteristics of ICUs are positively correlated with visibility. Results suggest that floor plans, which are repeatedly broken down into smaller convex (higher convex fragmentation values), or units, which have longer distances between their rooms or between their two opposite ends (longer relative grid distances), might have lower visibility levels across the unit. The findings of this study also suggest that wider corridors positively affect visibility of patient rooms., Conclusion: Changes in overall shape configuration and corridor width of nursing units may have important effects on patient observation and monitoring opportunities., (© The Author(s) 2016.)
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- 2016
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25. Finding a Middle Ground: Exploring the Impact of Patient- and Family-Centered Design on Nurse-Family Interactions in the Neuro ICU.
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Rippin AS, Zimring C, Samuels O, and Denham ME
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- Critical Care Nursing standards, Critical Care Nursing statistics & numerical data, Family Nursing standards, Family Nursing statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, Teaching, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Neuroscience Nursing standards, Neuroscience Nursing statistics & numerical data, Patient-Centered Care standards, Patient-Centered Care statistics & numerical data, United States, Critical Care Nursing organization & administration, Family Nursing organization & administration, Neuroscience Nursing organization & administration, Patient-Centered Care organization & administration, Professional-Family Relations
- Abstract
Objective: This comparative study of two adult neuro critical care units examined the impact of patient- and family-centered design on nurse-family interactions in a unit designed to increase family involvement., Background: A growing evidence base suggests that the built environment can facilitate the delivery of patient- and family-centered care (PFCC). However, few studies examine how the PFCC model impacts the delivery of care, specifically the role of design in nurse-family interactions in the adult intensive care unit (ICU) from the perspective of the bedside nurse., Methods: Two neuro ICUs with the same patient population and staff, but with different layouts, were compared. Structured observations were conducted to assess changes in the frequency, location, and content of interactions between the two units. Discussions with staff provided additional insights into nurse attitudes, perceptions, and experiences caring for families., Results: Nurses reported challenges balancing the needs of many stakeholders in a complex clinical environment, regardless of unit layout. However, differences in communication patterns between the clinician- and family-centered units were observed. More interactions were observed in nurse workstations in the PFCC unit, with most initiated by family. While the new unit was seen as more conducive to the delivery of PFCC, some nurses reported a loss of workspace control., Conclusions: Patient- and family-centered design created new spatial and temporal opportunities for nurse-family interactions in the adult ICU, thus supporting PFCC goals. However, greater exposure to unplanned family encounters may increase nurse stress without adequate spatial and organizational support., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
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- 2015
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26. Evidence-based design of healthcare facilities: opportunities for research and practice in infection prevention.
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Zimring C, Denham ME, Jacob JT, Cowan DZ, Do E, Hall K, Kamerow D, Kasali A, and Steinberg JP
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- Guidelines as Topic, Housekeeping, Hospital, Humans, Cross Infection prevention & control, Evidence-Based Practice, Facility Design and Construction standards
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- 2013
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27. Making acuity-adaptable units work: lessons from the field.
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Zimring C and Seo HB
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- Continuity of Patient Care, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Organizational Culture, Patient Satisfaction, Patient Transfer, Efficiency, Organizational, Hospitals, Models, Organizational, Patients' Rooms
- Abstract
Objective: Because there have been no clear directions on how to implement acuity-adaptable units (AAUs), this paper describes actual tactics and strategies that have worked in multiple institutions., Background: AAUs have been used in hospitals for the past decade, but reports in the literature have indicated both successes and difficulties in meeting operational goals and objectives. Despite various views regarding acuity adaptability, there is little in the literature that suggests why it works in some hospitals and not in others., Method: As part of a larger construction project, this project team interviewed the leaders of six hospitals to determine what was associated with the successful implementation of AAUs., Results: This paper reports on themes that emerged from these interviews, namely: choose the right specialty for medical centers; adopt the AAU model for the entire facility in community hospitals; bring in and train the right people; change culture through communication; and use acuity-adaptable unit clusters., Discussion and Conclusions: Main themes, predictable patient progress, and culture change are further discussed and key recommendations are described.
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- 2012
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28. Soundscape evaluations in two critical healthcare settings with different designs.
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Okcu S, Ryherd EE, Zimring C, and Samuels O
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- Auditory Threshold, Clinical Competence, Critical Care, Emotions, Environmental Monitoring, Humans, Loudness Perception, Perceptual Masking, Sound Spectrography, Speech Perception, Stress, Psychological etiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Task Performance and Analysis, Time Factors, Workforce, Workload, Auditory Perception, Clinical Alarms adverse effects, Health Facility Environment, Hospital Design and Construction, Intensive Care Units, Noise adverse effects, Nursing Staff, Hospital psychology, Occupational Exposure
- Abstract
Intensive care units (ICUs) have important but challenging sound environments. Alarms and equipment generate high levels of noise and ICUs are typically designed with hard surfaces. A poor sound environment can add to stress and make auditory tasks more difficult for clinicians. However few studies have linked more detailed analyses of the sound environment to nurse wellbeing and performance. This study is aimed at understanding the relationships between objective acoustic measures and self-reported nurse outcomes. Two 20-bed ICUs with similar patient acuity and treatment models were tested: A recently built neurological ICU and a 1980s-era medical-surgical ICU. The medical-surgical ICU was perceived as louder, more annoying, and having a greater negative impact of noise on work performance, health outcomes, and anxiety as compared to the neurological ICU. Surprisingly, there were little differences between two ICU sound environments based on traditional overall noise measures. The objective differences between the occupied sound environments in the two units only emerged through a more comprehensive analysis of the "occurrence rate" of peak and maximum levels, frequency content, and the speech interference level. Furthermore, mid-level transient sound occurrence rates were significantly and positively correlated to perceived annoyance and loudness levels., (© 2011 Acoustical Society of America)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Designing better healthcare environments: interprofessional competencies in healthcare design.
- Author
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Lamb G, Zimring C, Chuzi J, and Dutcher D
- Subjects
- Health Facility Administration, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Organizational Innovation, Patient Care Team organization & administration, Patient-Centered Care organization & administration, Systems Integration, Clinical Competence, Environment, Health Personnel organization & administration, Interprofessional Relations, Social Environment
- Abstract
There has been considerable interest in bridging educational programs in the United States across healthcare, architecture, industrial design, and human computing disciplines to design more effective and safer healthcare environments. New combinations of professionals including those outside the traditional healthcare disciplines are coming together to solve quality and safety problems and to re-envision the physical and social design of healthcare organizations. Little is known about the knowledge and skills essential to integrate these diverse perspectives and pose innovative solutions. A set of seven interprofessional competencies were identified through review of the literature, interviews of faculty and leaders in the field, and experience of the authors teaching interprofessional courses in healthcare design. The relevance and feasibility of these competencies were assessed through expert review by faculty and consultants and implementation in multiple courses.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Effect of innovative building design on physical activity.
- Author
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Nicoll G and Zimring C
- Subjects
- California, Diffusion of Innovation, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Services Research, Health Surveys, Humans, Occupational Health, Walking, Environment Design, Health Policy, Health Promotion, Motor Activity, Workplace
- Abstract
Stair climbing can be a low-cost and relatively accessible way to add everyday physical activity, but many building stairwells are inaccessible or unpleasant and elevators are far more convenient. This study explores the use of and attitude toward stairs in an innovative office building where the main elevators for able-bodied users stop only at every third floor ("skip-stop" elevators). These users are expected to walk up or down nearby stairs that have been made open and appealing ("skip-stop" stairs). The study takes advantage of a natural experiment. Some workers' offices were clustered around the skip-stop elevator and the stairs, whereas others had access to a traditional elevator core, that is, an elevator that stopped at each floor with nearby fire exit stairs. Stair use on the open skip-stop stairs and enclosed fire stairs was measured using infrared monitors and card-reader activity logs. An online survey of employees (N=299, a 17.4% response rate) gathered information on stair use and attitudes and behaviors toward physical activity; interviews with key personnel identified major implementation issues. The skip-stop stair was used 33 times more than the enclosed stair of the traditional elevator core, with 72% of survey participants reporting daily stair use. Although implementation issues related to organizational objectives, costs, security, barrier-free accessibility, and building codes exist, the skip-stop feature offers a successful strategy for increasing stair use in workplaces.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Welcome to a special issue.
- Author
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Zimring C and DuBose JR
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, Environment Design, Evidence-Based Practice, Facility Design and Construction, Health Facility Environment
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The business case for building better hospitals through evidence-based design.
- Author
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Sadler BL, DuBose J, and Zimring C
- Subjects
- Commerce, Cost Control, Health Facility Environment, Humans, Leadership, Medical Errors economics, Medical Errors prevention & control, Organizational Case Studies, Patient Satisfaction, Reimbursement, Incentive, United States, Evidence-Based Practice, Financial Management, Hospital, Hospital Design and Construction economics, Patient Safety, Quality Improvement
- Abstract
Purpose: After establishing the connection between building well-designed evidence-based facilities and improved safety and quality for patients, families, and staff, this article presents the compelling business case for doing so. It demonstrates why ongoing operating savings and initial capital costs must be analyzed and describes specific steps to ensure that design innovations are implemented effectively., Background: Hospital leaders and boards are now beginning to face a new reality: They can no longer tolerate preventable hospital-acquired conditions such as infections, falls, and injuries to staff or unnecessary intra-hospital patient transfers that can increase errors. Nor can they subject patients and families to noisy, confusing environments that increase anxiety and stress. They must effectively deploy all reasonable quality improvement techniques available. To be optimally effective, a variety of tactics must be combined and implemented in an integrated way. Hospital leadership must understand the clear connection between building well-designed healing environments and improved healthcare safety and quality for patients, families, and staff, as well as the compelling business case for doing so. Emerging pay-for-performance (P4P) methodologies that reward hospitals for quality and refuse to pay hospitals for the harm they cause (e.g., infections and falls) further strengthen this business case., Recommendations: When planning to build a new hospital or to renovate an existing facility, healthcare leaders should address a key question: Will the proposed project incorporate all relevant and proven evidence-based design innovations to optimize patient safety, quality, and satisfaction as well as workforce safety, satisfaction, productivity, and energy efficiency? When conducting a business case analysis for a new project, hospital leaders should consider ongoing operating savings and the market share impact of evidence-based design interventions as well as initial capital costs. They should consider taking the 10 steps recommended to ensure an optimal, cost-effective hospital environment. A return-on-investment (ROI) framework is put forward for the use of individual organizations.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Implementing healthcare excellence: the vital role of the CEO in evidence-based design.
- Author
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Zimring C, Augenbroe GL, Malone EB, and Sadler BL
- Subjects
- Humans, Leadership, Organizational Culture, United States, Administrative Personnel, Evidence-Based Practice, Hospital Design and Construction, Professional Role, Quality of Health Care
- Abstract
Purpose: This paper explores the role of the chief executive officer (CEO) in evidence-based design (EBD), discussing the internal and external challenges that a CEO faces, such as demands for increased quality, safety, patient-and-family-centeredness, increased revenue, and reduced cost., Background: Based on a series of interviews and case studies and the experience of the authors as researchers, consultants, and CEOs, this paper provides a model for EBD and recommends actions that a CEO can undertake to create an effective project over the life cycle of a building. TOPICAL HEADINGS: Evidence-Based Design: A Performance-Based Approach to Achieving Key Goals; Key Approaches to Executing Evidence-Based Design; Overcoming Barriers to Innovation: The CEO's Vital Role in Implementing Evidence-Based Design, Conclusions: The CEO bears special responsibility for successful facility project implementation. Only the CEO possesses the responsibility and authority to articulate the strategy, vision, goals, and resource constraints that frame every project. With the support of their boards, CEOs set the stage for the transformation of an organization's culture and fuel clinical and business process reengineering by encouraging and, if necessary, forcing collaboration between the strong disciplinary and departmental divisions found in healthcare systems.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A review of the research literature on evidence-based healthcare design.
- Author
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Ulrich RS, Zimring C, Zhu X, DuBose J, Seo HB, Choi YS, Quan X, and Joseph A
- Subjects
- Humans, Infection Control, Occupational Diseases prevention & control, Environment, Controlled, Evidence-Based Practice, Facility Design and Construction, Health Facility Environment, Patient Safety, Quality of Health Care
- Abstract
Objective: This report surveys and evaluates the scientific research on evidence-based healthcare design and extracts its implications for designing better and safer hospitals., Background: It builds on a literature review conducted by researchers in 2004., Methods: Research teams conducted a new and more exhaustive search for rigorous empirical studies that link the design of hospital physical environments with healthcare outcomes. The review followed a two-step process, including an extensive search for existing literature and a screening of each identified study for the relevance and quality of evidence., Results: This review found a growing body of rigorous studies to guide healthcare design, especially with respect to reducing the frequency of hospital-acquired infections. Results are organized according to three general types of outcomes: patient safety, other patient outcomes, and staff outcomes. The findings further support the importance of improving outcomes for a range of design characteristics or interventions, including single-bed rooms rather than multibed rooms, effective ventilation systems, a good acoustic environment, nature distractions and daylight, appropriate lighting, better ergonomic design, acuity-adaptable rooms, and improved floor layouts and work settings. Directions for future research are also identified., Conclusions: The state of knowledge of evidence-based healthcare design has grown rapidly in recent years. The evidence indicates that well-designed physical settings play an important role in making hospitals safer and more healing for patients, and better places for staff to work.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Influences of building design and site design on physical activity: research and intervention opportunities.
- Author
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Zimring C, Joseph A, Nicoll GL, and Tsepas S
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Humans, Environment Design, Exercise, Facility Design and Construction
- Abstract
Americans spend much of their days in buildings, yet relatively little is known about how the design of buildings or their site influences physical activity. Although some evidence suggests that using specific features of buildings and their immediate surroundings such as stairs can have a meaningful impact on health, the influences of the physical environment on physical activity at the building and site scale are not yet clear. While there is some research suggesting that people will be more active in buildings that have visible, accessible, pleasing, and supportive features, such as motivational point-of-decision prompts and well-designed stairs, there is only limited evidence to support that assertion. This paper reviews the available evidence linking design and site decisions to physical activity, and suggests a framework for connecting research and implementation strategies for creating activity-friendly buildings. In consideration of the kinds of physical activities associated with buildings and their sites, it is proposed that the form of buildings and sites affect physical activity at several spatial scales: the selection and design of sites with respect to a building's location on its site and within its immediate community and the provision and layout of site amenities; building design such as the programming, layout, and form of the building; and building element design such as the design and layout of elements such as stairs or exercise rooms. The paper concludes with an overview of opportunities for research and intervention strategies within the building industry, focusing on public buildings, which provide numerous high-leverage opportunities for linking research and implementation.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. New design technologies: using computer technology to improve design quality.
- Author
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Peponis J, Zimring C, and Scanlon MM
- Subjects
- Hospital Design and Construction standards, Models, Organizational, United States, Computer-Aided Design, Efficiency, Organizational, Hospital Design and Construction methods, Location Directories and Signs
- Published
- 1996
37. Effects of institutional room acoustics on speech discrimination of developmentally disabled residents and of staff.
- Author
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Gentry DM and Zimring CM
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Acoustics, Education of Persons with Intellectual Disabilities, Facility Design and Construction, Speech Perception
- Published
- 1979
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