Healthcare Portfolio
Healthcare facilities are comprised of diverse spaces with specialized considerations and requirements and include clinics, diagnostic and treatment areas, inpatient units, research laboratories as well a non-clinical areas that support the operations. Over the last 60 years our team has developed expertise in healthcare design and understand how each of the spaces work together to affect and impact the lives of the patients, visitors and staff.
Our approach to healthcare design is based in the belief that physical space can be an integral part of the healing process and will have a major impact on patient outcomes and staff satisfaction.
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hsc winnipeg women’s hospital (video by hsc)
Healthcare delivery models are constantly changing and evolving. Current models of care place patients and their families at the core, and this is reflected in the design of healthcare facilities.
More and more, primary care services are being offered in community healthcare centres allowing patients to be treated close to home. This reduces stress by reducing travel and improving the quality of life. The essence of evidence based design is patient safety which includes infection risk, reduction of hospital acquired injury and errors in treatment.
Within hospitals, inpatients have the benefit of more single rooms as hospitals move away from the old ward style units. Naturally, this helps to mitigate infection prevention and control issues, but it also allows for the design of a more homelike environment. These rooms often make accommodations for a family member who may wish to overnight. This in turn supports the comfort and well-being of the patient, promotes recovery and reduces the length of stay.
The environment of care must address the needs of a patient in their unimpeded recovery. The physical layouts together with the careful selection of materials have a measured impact on the design of the contemporary hospital. Additionally, staff that care for those patients must be given effective spaces in which to work and places where they can rejuvenate themselves to make them more effective in care delivery.
We understand that the design choices we make will affect the well-being of the people who use these spaces, and we strive to incorporate evidence-based design that supports medical advancement and patient care.