Description
Hospitals should be conducive to patient recovery and safety as well as employee health and productivity. A variety of diverse noise sources populate hospitals such as HVAC systems, occupant sounds, alarms, and medical equipment. There is strong and growing evidence of the negative impacts of a poor hospital acoustic environment. For example, patient sleep disruption, cardiovascular arousal, increased incidence of rehospitalization, and extended hospital stay have been linked to hospital acoustics. There is also evidence that staff mental efficiency, short-term memory, stress, burn-out, and hearing loss are related to the acoustic environment. The Hospital Acoustics Research Team (HART) is a unique collaboration of specialists in engineering, architecture, psychology, medicine, and nursing that is working to evaluate the modern hospital acoustic environment and the associated psycho-physiological responses of occupants. Case studies and findings from this body of work will be discussed. The results are advancing the understanding how various aspects of the acoustic environment impact occupants, how to best measure and quantify these aspects, and how to improve the hospital acoustic environment to make hospitals healthier for occupants.
Citation: ASHRAE Conference Papers, Las Vegas, NV
Product Details
- Published:
- 2011
- Number of Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 1 file , 1.4 MB
- Product Code(s):
- D-LV-11-C030