dc.description.abstract |
The twenty first century witnesses a huge development in the technology of
medical appliances and equipment's; which causes a tremendous jump in ways
of diagnosis and treatment. This subsequently necessitates a change in the
design concept of hospital, to accommodate the changes, which result from the
nature, sizes, shapes and function of the new systems. It is felt necessary to
establish and shape certain design standards for each specialized department in
the hospital, by which, maximum level of flexibility could be achieved and
spaces could be shaped to absorb any further possible developments.
Despite the variety and complications of departments and types and classes of
hospital; this research is confined to a detailed study of the intensive care unit
(I.C.U). The researcher is concerned about the type of design standards which
provide the best environment for users (patients, doctors, nurses, technicians,
workers and visitors as well).
The study started with a theoretical base for identifying the concept of hospital
building and its development through history till it reached its present shape
and status, with all complications and interaction of its different departments
and of their functional relationships.
The research emphasized and explained the standards of components and items
of the intensive care unit. This is done through field survey carried out in a
number of hospitals in the eastern region of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The
responses to the questionnaire, distributed among doctors, nurses and
technicians, patients, and patients-attendants, when analyzed resulted in clear
guide to the standards that could be adopted by hospitals authority in the
kingdom when establishing intensive care units.
It is clear, through comparison, that the established suggested standards
deviate a lot from those adopted by the western world. The deviations are
mainly related to the environmental conditions of the region, and to a wider
extent, with the social, cultural and religious background of the population. |
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