Zephyrnet Logo

Hospitals Quickly Reshape to Treat Covid-19 Patients

Date:

The situation in Springfield does not look as immediately dire as it did when the hospital began constructing its triage area, in mid-March. Massachusetts closed nonessential businesses on March 24, and does not expect its peak in cases until next week. But Baystate’s workers still feel like they are racing the clock. “We’re at the plateau right now,” says Waltz, referring to the number of Covid-19 cases in the area, which reached 540 on Monday. “I think it’s essential for us to learn in case we have another spike.”

Equipping hospitals to battle an infectious disease is not just about installing more beds or adding ventilators. Infected patients need to be isolated; air needs to be sucked out of patient rooms up to 10 times an hour, to avoid cross-contamination. Safe storage spots are needed for oxygen tanks, both full and empty. And each room needs to be near an equipped nurses’ station, where workers can fill out paperwork, talk to each other, and wash their hands.

Of course, it’s easier to envision the ideal space for infectious disease patients than to build and fund one in the midst of a pandemic. A stopgap solution may be prefabricated modules like those built by the architecture firm HGA and the construction company Boldt. The units are designed to be placed next to hospitals, as additions, or as standalone field hospitals. They come equipped with specialized stations for workers to safely put on and remove protective equipment; controls for patient’s IV pumps reach into corridors, so workers can monitor them without entering patients’ rooms.

person lathering hands with soap and water

How Long Does the Coronavirus Live on Surfaces? 

Plus: What it means to “flatten the curve,” and everything else you need to know about the coronavirus.

Last month, HGA heard mostly from health care systems interested in field hospitals or tents, amid concerns they would not have enough beds for the sick. “Now, we’re looking more into the quality of the care environment,” says Kurt Spiering, an architect and a principal at the firm who specializes in health care design. The company expects to ship its first prefab module to a client on Monday.

As the crisis drags on, health care designers are thinking about more far-reaching changes to hospitals, too. In the past, “universal rooms” with built-in flexibility to handle patients at all stages of care have been seen as inconvenient for hospital staff, with specialists forced to run all over the facility to see their patients. These spaces also tend to be more expensive to construct. But the model might get a second look in health care facilities newly worried about adapting to sudden onslaughts of infectious disease, says Frank Zilm, the director of the Institute of Health and Wellness Design at the University of Kansas.

The pandemic may also spark interest in planning for future patient surges, whether they’re related to global pandemics or more local disasters, like earthquakes and mass shootings. Hui Cai, the associate director of the institute, predicts US hospitals may imitate facilities overseas and identify potential places for overflow patients, such as nearby parking lots, public buildings, or convention centers, before they even start building.

In Springfield, the dramatic surge in Covid-19 patients that health care workers feared hasn’t yet arrived, so the new triage center isn’t being used to evaluate or test sick people. Instead, the Baystate Health system is using the space to train workers to use new kinds of protective equipment, and to fit them to N95 masks. “It has been a benefit, but it hasn’t been used for patients,” says Waltz, the design director. She’s hoping it stays that way.


More From WIRED on Covid-19

Source: https://www.wired.com/story/hospitals-quickly-reshape-treat-covid-19-patients

spot_img

Latest Intelligence

spot_img

Chat with us

Hi there! How can I help you?