Informing Healthcare Waiting Area Design Using Transparency Attributes: A Comparative Preference Study

Author:

Jiang Shan1,Powers Matthew2,Allison David3,Vincent Ellen4

Affiliation:

1. School of Design and Community Development, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, USA

2. Department of Landscape Architecture, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA

3. School of Architecture, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA

4. School of Agricultural, Forest, and Environmental Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to explore people’s visual preference for waiting areas in general hospital environments designed with transparency attributes that fully integrate nature. Background: Waiting can be a tedious and frustrating experience among people seeking healthcare treatments and negatively affect their perception of the quality of care. Positive distractions and supportive designs have gained increasing attraction to improve people’s waiting experience. Nature, which has shown therapeutic effects according to a growing amount of evidence, could be a distinguished positive distraction in waiting areas. Additionally, the theory of transparency was operationalized to indicate a spatial continuity between the external nature and the built interiors in general healthcare waiting area design. Method: A survey method was adopted in the study. Twenty-one images of general healthcare waiting areas depicting three design typologies were preselected following a strict procedure, including designs with (a) no window views, (b) limited window views to nature, and (c) transparent spaces with maximum natural views. Ninety-five student participants rated the images based on their visual preference using a Likert-type scale. Results and Conclusions: The results showed that transparent waiting areas were significantly preferred. A significant positive relationship existed between the level of transparency and people’s preference scores. The factor analysis indicated additional supportive features that may affect people’s preferences, including daylight, perceived warmth, noninstitutional furniture arrangement, visual orientation, and the use of natural materials for interior design. However, these tentative results need to be furthered tested with the real patient population as the next step of this study.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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