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Building Good Health
ByJerry L. Morgensen
Construction for the health care community is particularly unique. The technology propping up modern medicine changes at lightning speed with the advent of each new phase of equipment. Exacting conditions and specifications for laboratories must be met or exceeded for research efforts to expose disease, pinpoint preventions, promote wellness, and alter our views on longevity and mortality. Provider work environs have an impact on dispensing patient care, and patients themselves often reflect the mood of their environment. It is imperative that those of us who have experience in constructing health-related institutions support health care advancements with flexible designs, the latest technology and materials, and surroundings conducive for the medical community to have its best chance to do its best work.

I've been privileged during my career to be associated with building medical centers, emergency departments, diagnostic centers, biological research facilities, university projects, classified laboratories, "clean rooms" of all sorts, heliports and other medical provider infrastructure, and so much more. I've learned that construction for health care is an unceasing education to be persistently pursued and refined.

One construction method that has evolved over several years is a design-build approach. It presents the best opportunity for collaboration among principals, especially important in the fluctuating health care arena. With design-build, the contractor's responsibility begins and ends with a collective consciousness among the designers, construction entities, the financiers, the clients, and the users. Under a single general contractor, these parties become members of a single-minded team, saving precious time and resources while eliminating anxiety-ridden logistical and communications issues. The decision-making group serves as a forum for frank brainstorming, problem-solving, and budgetary decisions that infuses positive momentum throughout the life of the project. With this spirit of cooperation, the user receives the best possible product.

Medical clients have become very sophisticated over the years in design and construction. Not only do they act as partners in the decision making, they frequently bring client-purchased materials and equipment to the table to be incorporated into a project. As a member of a design-build team, they meet with the principals at least weekly to identify issues and determine details. What type of patient bed should be purchased? As the construction industry moves from the Uniform Building Code to the International Building Code, what are the differences, and which should be incorporated? What are respective jurisdictions? Is the institution public or private? Does it receive federal funding? What kind of roof? Which modality should be housed on which level? These issues, and all the rest on a sizeable list of items, are addressed by everyone, allowing development of a singular prioritized work plan that favors the client and user groups.

Most health care conscious contractors are getting smarter, too. Value engineering and securing mutual decisions in advance of breaking ground reduce funding for the project, a resource that can be transferred to upgrade other aspects.

ears ago, for example, the industry norm dictated that the client define equipment needs during initial design phases. The ensuing design and bidding phases could continue for two more years before construction commenced. When the facility was completed and it was time to set equipment into cookie-cutter spaces, the latest equipment carried new dimensions. It was already time to remodel. With design-build methods, clients and users have the luxury of more time to make final decisions. "Floating" space designs go even further to offer flexibility throughout the reasonable useful life of a building.

Actively involving user groups from the very first day is a good rule. From pharmacists to food service managers to medical staff to the patients themselves, talking regularly with those who will work and reside within the environment produces a wiser perception on the part of team members as to what defines a successful outcome. In general, contractors are responding well to this brand of input from users and patient groups. Again, it's part of the ongoing education of the construction industry.

Increasingly, hospitals are giving the nod to private rooms over semi-private. The movement is toward giving patients more privacy, conducting better infection control, and eliminating the sometimes difficult job of pairing patients with compatible illnesses. The trend in architecture and landscaping is to create a more soothing, homelike environment where the emphasis is on wellness and healing to offset the more austere and clinical treatment elements. Daylighting is incorporated wherever architecturally possible, as is lush groundscaping. Inside, well-designed spaces with clear signage enable patients to circulate in localized areas for all their needs, including admissions, examinations, and treatments rather than requiring them to maneuver through the stressful maze of florescent-lit corridors and elevators.

What are the immediate physical plant hurdles for health care? Medical equipment, with its heat and light sensitivities, power requirements, and space needs is advancing at a dizzy pace matching that of computer technology. Treatments are changing and so are the spaces in which they are performed. Telecommunications and video conferencing allow for greater interface between physicians and researchers, so let's take advantage of that, too. Medical record-keeping will be digitally stored rather than filed. As this process is perfected, medical space assigned to film and file storage will be freed for other uses. More examination rooms, office space, or cozy lounges may take up the space. Contractors need to be fully aware of these possibilities and more.

As a health care administrator, provider or patient, if you are presented with a chance to add your perspective to a medical construction project, get into the mix. Competent contractors encourage your input, and it's your chance to take advantage of it. In fact, rapid progress happens only with open conversation, an understanding of the common goal, and a pull in the same direction. Design and construction professionals have a burdensome duty to anticipate heath care trends, but hand in hand with the health care industry, everyone learns, and all benefit. It's happening. There is a conceptual change afoot as well as a philosophical one in the medical community, and facility construction should support both. We could do with the most flexible and aesthetically-pleasing solutions for space best suited to improve the health of our family, friends, and community populations. Changes are coming quickly, and the construction industry is doing its best to mirror the advancing medical field. If not at the speed of light, progress is surely happening at the speed of life.




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