March 3, 2010

How does hospital ambience effect patient health?

Does a fancy hospital interior and soothing music help promote faster healing? Sharp Hospital system certainly things so. NPR’s Marketplace even covers the story:

Dan Gross is executive vice president of Sharp Healthcare. I meet up with him in the lobby for my tour of the swanky Sharp Memorial. Its a $200-million hospital in San Diego. And it’s built with the principals of what’s known as “evidence-based design.”

GROSS: There’s a lot of research today and a lot of conversation around how the design of a hospital really promotes comfort, healing and produces better quality outcomes for patients.

Does a “nice” hospital actually improve health outcomes? That will be difficult to ascertain. Building a fancy hospital may improve outcomes, or it may be the case that nicer hospitals attractive relatively richer, relatively healthier patients.

Even if “evidenced-based design” does improve health outcomes, the change in ambience may not affect patient health directly. For instance, Sharp talks about using the Disney concept of on-stage and off-stage work where “…nurses have private areas ‘off stage’ where they can prepare medications uninterrupted.” Having nurses think they are “on stage” may incentivize them to work harder, smarter and more professionally. Further, a more luxurious hospital may attract higher quality staff.

From an individual hospital’s point of view, it doesn’t matter which mechanism is causing this improvement in health. From society’s point of view, however, if fancy new hospitals simply attract the best staff and healthier, more affluent patients, then improved hospital design may be a waste of resources.


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

March 2, 2010

Building a Network

In my walk into work this morning, I listened to a podcast titled “Building a Network”.  I felt it was appropriate to share in light of HIMSS and ACHE this month.  The podcast focuses on three main points:

  1. Grow Volume Indiscriminately
  2. GIVE GIVE GIVE (don’t take, take, take)
  3. Keep In Touch

The cast also emphasizes the difference between “networking” and “building a network”.  As you travel to Atlanta or Chicago, spend 30 minutes listening to this podcast and let us know if it helps in how you appropriate you ACHE/HIMSS experience.

Oh, yeah ... and there's a blooper in the show. Did you catch it?

Source: http://manager-tools.com/2006/05/building-a-network