Stroke Inpatient Rehabilitation Environments: Aligning Building Construction and Clinical Practice Guidelines Through Care Process Mapping

Author:

Saa Juan Pablo12ORCID,Lipson-Smith Ruby13ORCID,White Marcus4ORCID,Davis Aaron5ORCID,Yang Tianyi4,Wilde Jack5ORCID,Blackburn Marnie6,Churilov Leonid7ORCID,Bernhardt Julie2ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. The Florey Institute (Austin Site), University of Melbourne, VIC, Australia (J.P.S., R.L.-S., J.B.).

2. La Trobe University, Bundoora Campus, Melbourne, VIC, Australia (J.P.S.).

3. The MARCS Institute for Brain, Behaviour, and Development, Western Sydney University, Penrith, NSW, Australia (R.L.-S.).

4. Swinburne University of Technology, School of Design and Architecture, Melbourne, VIC, Australia (M.W., T.Y.).

5. University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia (A.D., J.W.)

6. Australasian Health Facility Guidelines, Health Infrastructure/Australasian Health Infrastructure Alliance, New South Wales Health Infrastructure, NSW, Australia (M.B.)

7. The University of Melbourne, Melbourne Medical School, VIC, Australia (L.C.).

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Stroke inpatient rehabilitation is a complex process involving stroke survivors, staff, and family utilizing a common space for a shared purpose: to optimize recovery. This complex pathway is rarely fully described. Stroke care is ideally guided by Clinical Practice Guidelines, and the rehabilitation built environment should serve to optimize care delivery, patient and staff experience. We aimed to articulate the inpatient stroke rehabilitation process of care in a series of process maps, and to understand the degree to which current stroke clinical and building construction (ie, design) guidelines align to support inpatient stroke rehabilitation. METHODS: We used the Value-Focused Process Engineering methodology to create maps describing the events and activities that typically occur in the current stroke inpatient rehabilitation service model. These maps were completed through individual and group session consultations with stroke survivors, architects, policy makers, and clinical experts. We then determined which sections of the Australian Stroke Rehabilitation Guidelines and the Australasian Health Facility Design Guidelines could be aligned and applied to the process maps. RESULTS: We present a summary process map for stroke inpatient rehabilitation, alongside detailed process maps for 4 different phases of rehabilitation (admission, a normal weekday, a weekend day, and discharge) using Value-Focused Process Engineering notation. The integration of design and clinical guidelines with care pathway maps revealed where guidelines lack detail to be readily linked to current stroke inpatient care practice, providing an opportunity to design stroke inpatient rehabilitation spaces based on the activities occurring within them. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings highlight gaps where clinical and design experts should work together to use guidelines to their full potential; and to improve the process of planning for future stroke rehabilitation units.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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