The dying patient: taboo, controversy and missing terms of reference for designers—an architectural perspective

Author:

Bellamy AnnieORCID,Clark SamORCID,Anstey SallyORCID

Abstract

Contemporary society has grown seemingly detached from the realities of growing old and subsequently, dying. A consequence, perhaps, of death becoming increasingly overmedicalised, nearly one in two UK nationals die institutional deaths. In this article we, two architectural scholars engaged in teaching, research and practice and a nurse and healthcare scholar with a focus on end-of-life care and peoples’ experiences, wish to draw attention to a controversy resulting from a paucity in current literature on the terms of reference of the dying ‘patient’ as we navigate the future implications of the COVID-19 pandemic. This contributes to a relative lack of touchstones for architects to refer to when designing person-centred palliative care environments. Unlike common building types, architects are extremely unlikely to have lived experience of palliative care environments as patients; and therefore, require the help of healthcare professionals to imagine and empathise with the requirements of a person dying away from home. This paper includes a review of ageing and dying literature to understand, and distil from an architectural perspective,who, design professionals, are designing for and to remember the nuanced characteristics of those we hold a duty of care toward. We ask readers to heed the importance of accurate terms of reference, especially when commissioning and/or designing environments of palliative care. Furthermore, we put forward an appeal for interdisciplinary collaboration to develop a framework for codesigning positive experiences of person-centred careandenvironments at the end of life.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Philosophy,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

Reference67 articles.

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2. Home and/or Hospital: the architectures of end-of-life care;Adams;Change Over Time,2016

3. Ahuja Nitin . “End stages.” Places Journal, no. 2018 (2018).doi:10.22269/180515

4. Architects Niall McLaughlin . “Alzheimer’s Respite Centre. Bartlett Design Research Folios.”, 2016. http://bartlettdesignresearchfolios.com/alzheimers-respite-centre/read/.

5. Architects, SIGNAL . Programme for the Good Hospice in Denmark. Realdania, 2006. http://www.hospiceforum.dk/media/TheGoodHospiceInDenmark.pdf

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