flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Hospital designers get the scoop on the role of innovation in healthcare

Healthcare Facilities

Hospital designers get the scoop on the role of innovation in healthcare

Innovation is a topic of mounting importance under the Affordable Care Act, which can penalize a hospital with a poor record of patient satisfaction and outcomes.


By Robert Cassidy, Executive Editor | November 4, 2015
Hospital designers get the scoop on the role of innovation in healthcare

Kaiser Permanente’s New Garfield Innovation Center. Photo: Ted Eytan

“Innovation” was the byword as 175 healthcare designers gathered in Chicago for the American College of Healthcare Architects/AIA Academy of Architecture for Health Summer Leadership Summit.

Experts from Kaiser Permanente, Cleveland Clinic, Mayo Clinic, Massachusetts General Hospital, and other healthcare institutions and think tanks described various models they’re using to spur innovation and improve the quality of care for their patients.

That’s a topic of mounting importance under the Affordable Care Act, which can penalize a hospital with a poor record of patient satisfaction and outcomes.

KAISER PERMANENTE. Jennifer Liebermann, Co-founder of Kaiser Permanente’s 37,000-sf Garfield Innovation Center, described a typical problem such in-house innovation facilities tackle: how to reduce medication errors. “Nurses get interrupted all the time when they’re trying to give patients their meds,” she said. That leads to medication errors and injury to patients.

HOW TO DESIGN A HEALTHCARE INNOVATION CENTER

Larry Stofko, EVP of the Innovation Institute, provided ACHA/AAH summiteers with advice on designing physical spaces to enable innovation:
1. Make the space flexible, with movable walls and furnishings.
2. Make it inspiring, with whimsical artwork and “creative” colors (orange and blue seem to work best).
3. Make it collaborative, with lots of whiteboards, wall space, and glass to write on.
4. Make it social, with a working kitchen, comfy couches, springboard chairs.
5. Make it hard-working, by providing the right tools and hardware (e.g., 3D printers).
6. Make sure it reflects the institution’s culture and brand.
7. Provide a dedicated showcase to display your innovation successes.

The Garfield Center team tried several ideas, even something that looked like a hazmat suit (“We tested it on nurses, and they said they’d never wear that thing,” said Liebermann). The solution: a bright yellow sash that the nurse wears over her shoulder when dispensing prescriptions.

“That sash lets everyone know, ‘Don’t interrupt me, I’m dispensing meds,’” said Liebermann. A simple and inexpensive solution, but so effective that it’s being rolled out through the entire 32-hospital Kaiser Permanente system.

“We borrow ideas from other healthcare organizations, but some of our most powerful inspiration comes from outside healthcare,” said Liebermann. KP is working with Walmart on telemedicine and with NASA on improving safety in operating rooms. “NASA has a lot of experience with its people working in tight spaces,” she said.

CLEVELAND CLINIC is an institution with a long history of innovation in healthcare—2,600 patent applications, 450 royalty licenses, 71 spinoffs, $799 million in equity investments, according to Brian Kolonick, General Manager of Cleveland Clinic Innovations’ Global Healthcare Innovations Alliance. The alliance includes MedStar Health, North Shore–LIJ, Promedica, the University of Notre Dame, and Marshfield Clinic.

Half (50%) of the clinic’s inventions have been medical devices, along with IT solutions (23%) and therapeutic/diagnostic systems (22%). The remaining 5% were healthcare delivery solutions. “Delivery solutions are our secret sauce,” said Kolonick. Cleveland Clinic excels at coming up with new ways to improve patient outcomes and then outsourcing those capabilities to other institutions.

Cleveland Clinic is not modest about collaborating with the private sector and government agencies. It’s working with NASA Glenn Research Center to see how lessons from space medicine can be applied to terrestrial healthcare. They’re consulting with Parker Hannifan (“They know a lot about tubes, and we use a lot of tubes in healthcare,” said Kolonick) and Lubrizol, for its expertise in polymers.

“We’re also involved with Cox Communications, to see how they can help us work with patients from inside the home, or via healthcare pods at the grocery store,” he said.

MAYO CLINIC’s Center for Innovation was founded in 2008. “We’re a shared service for innovation across Mayo,” said Barbara Spurrier, MHA, CMPE, the CFI’s Administrative Director. Its staff of 60 includes scientists, designers, programmers, analysts, bioethicists, nurses, and lawyers.

The CFI has 47 projects in the works, most of which have to be completed in 12 months. “There are a lot of things that don’t work out,” Spurrier said. “Sometimes we get all the way to a prototype and it doesn’t work, and we have to put it on the shelf.”

Mayo is looking at developing smartphone apps, such as one that teenage asthma patients could use to monitor their condition without having to go to the clinic.

Video medical visits, perhaps via Skype, are of keen interest to Mayo, especially for use with older patients. “How can we help seniors thrive in place?” asked Spurrier. “We know that 85% of them can get their care at home. What conditions need to be in place so that we can serve them right in their homes?”

“The Garage” is another Mayo innovation initiative—an incubator for products and services with commercialization potential. There’s also CoDE, which provides as much as $50,000 each to up to 10 teams a year for what Spurrier called “open innovation.” Mayo’s “Transform” international symposium recently attracted 850 innovators from 16 countries.

Mayo’s newest project: the 7,000-sf Well Living Lab, in collaboration with its home city of Rochester, Minn. “We’ll be looking at the intersection of medical and scientific research as related to the built environment,” said Spurrier.

MASS GENERAL. James A. Gordon, MD, MPA, Director of the Learning Laboratory at Massachusetts General Hospital and the Gilbert Program in Medical Simulation at Harvard Medical School, emphasized the need for simulation tools and labs at teaching hospitals. He said simulation training was crucial to improving patient safety and accelerating and assuring physician expertise.

“In medicine, every day is game day,” said Gordon, an emergency medicine specialist. To his fellow physicians, he posed this rhetorical question: “Can you continue to maintain your standards without allocating time for being offline to train?” Gordon didn’t say so outright, but it was clear he didn’t think so.

Related Stories

Mixed-Use | Jun 29, 2023

Massive work-live-play development opens in LA's new Cumulus District

VOX at Cumulus, a 14-acre work-live-play development in Los Angeles, offers 910 housing units and 100,000 sf of retail space anchored by a Whole Foods outlet. VOX, one of the largest mixed-use communities to open in the Los Angeles area, features apartments and townhomes with more than one dozen floorplans.

Office Buildings | Jun 28, 2023

When office-to-residential conversion works

The cost and design challenges involved with office-to-residential conversions can be daunting; designers need to devise creative uses to fully utilize the space.

Architects | Jun 28, 2023

CSHQA hires first CEO in company's 134-year history

The Board of Directors of CSHQA announced the appointment of Ryan D. Martin, AIA NCARB as Chief Executive Officer.

Multifamily Housing | Jun 28, 2023

Sutton Tower, an 80-story multifamily development, completes construction in Manhattan’s Midtown East

In Manhattan’s Midtown East, the construction of Sutton Tower, an 80-story residential building, has been completed. Located in the Sutton Place neighborhood, the tower offers 120 for-sale residences, with the first move-ins scheduled for this summer. The project was designed by Thomas Juul-Hansen and developed by Gamma Real Estate and JVP Management. Lendlease, the general contractor, started construction in 2018.

Architects | Jun 27, 2023

Why architects need to think like developers, with JZA Architecture's Jeff Zbikowski

Jeff Zbikowski, Principal and Founder of Los Angeles-based JZA Architecture, discusses the benefits of having a developer’s mindset when working with clients, and why architecture firms lose out when they don’t have a thorough understanding of real estate regulations and challenges.

Apartments | Jun 27, 2023

Average U.S. apartment rent reached all-time high in May, at $1,716

Multifamily rents continued to increase through the first half of 2023, despite challenges for the sector and continuing economic uncertainty. But job growth has remained robust and new households keep forming, creating apartment demand and ongoing rent growth. The average U.S. apartment rent reached an all-time high of $1,716 in May.

Apartments | Jun 27, 2023

Dallas high-rise multifamily tower is first in state to receive WELL Gold certification

HALL Arts Residences, 28-story luxury residential high-rise in the Dallas Arts District, recently became the first high-rise multifamily tower in Texas to receive WELL Gold Certification, a designation issued by the International WELL Building Institute. The HKS-designed condominium tower was designed with numerous wellness details.

University Buildings | Jun 26, 2023

Addition by subtraction: The value of open space on higher education campuses

Creating a meaningful academic and student life experience on university and college campuses does not always mean adding a new building. A new or resurrected campus quad, recreational fields, gardens, and other greenspaces can tie a campus together, writes Sean Rosebrugh, AIA, LEED AP, HMC Architects' Higher Education Practice Leader.

Standards | Jun 26, 2023

New Wi-Fi standard boosts indoor navigation, tracking accuracy in buildings

The recently released Wi-Fi standard, IEEE 802.11az enables more refined and accurate indoor location capabilities. As technology manufacturers incorporate the new standard in various devices, it will enable buildings, including malls, arenas, and stadiums, to provide new wayfinding and tracking features.

Green | Jun 26, 2023

Federal government will spend $30 million on novel green building technologies

The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) will invest $30 million from the Inflation Reduction Act to increase the sustainability of federal buildings by testing novel technologies. The vehicle for that effort, the Green Proving Ground (GPG) program, will invest in American-made technologies to help increase federal electric vehicle supply equipment, protect air quality, reduce climate pollution, and enhance building performance.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Healthcare Facilities

Watch on-demand: Key Trends in the Healthcare Facilities Market for 2024-2025

Join the Building Design+Construction editorial team for this on-demand webinar on key trends, innovations, and opportunities in the $65 billion U.S. healthcare buildings market. A panel of healthcare design and construction experts present their latest projects, trends, innovations, opportunities, and data/research on key healthcare facilities sub-sectors. A 2024-2025 U.S. healthcare facilities market outlook is also presented.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021