Simulated impact of lift car sizes on transport of critical care patients: Informing the design of the New Dunedin Hospital.
Sheila G BarnettKatherine M StephensPublished in: Anaesthesia and intensive care (2024)
The New Dunedin Hospital (NDH) is New Zealand's largest health infrastructure build. Here we describe the use of a simple simulation-based hospital design exercise to inform the appropriate lift car size for critical care intrahospital transfers in the NDH. The intensive care unit (ICU) user group tested a series of entries and exits of simulated complex patient transfers in mocked-up lift cars of three different dimensions. Time taken to enter and exit the lift were recorded, reflecting the relative difficulty of transfer. Qualitative assessments were made of ease and perceived safety of transfer. These simulations demonstrated that recommended standard patient lift cars, often proposed for critical care transfers, could not physically accommodate all complex ICU transfers. A size of 1800 mm wide (W) × 3000 mm deep (D) had the physical capacity to permit all simulated ICU transfers, but with staff and patient risk. As lift car size increased to 2200 mm W × 3300 mm D, the simulation demonstrated reduced transfer times, smoother entry and exit, improved access to the head end of the bed, and reduced risk of disconnection or dislodgement of lines and airway support. The resultant clinical recommendations for the dimensions of a critical care lift car surpass current international health architecture guidelines and may help to inform future updates. The NDH project benefited from an objective assessment of risk, in language familiar to clinicians and healthcare architects. The outcome was an upsizing of the two ICU-capable lifts.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- intensive care unit
- mental health
- mechanical ventilation
- case report
- public health
- physical activity
- end stage renal disease
- health information
- newly diagnosed
- adverse drug
- clinical practice
- systematic review
- chronic kidney disease
- autism spectrum disorder
- risk assessment
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- quality improvement
- molecular dynamics
- human health
- patient reported
- body composition
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- resistance training
- optical coherence tomography
- health promotion
- social media
- electron transfer
- electronic health record
- virtual reality
- breast cancer risk
- drug induced