Room Size Matters in Behavioral Health Outpatient Facilities
The following proposal highlights the considerations that must be satisfied in planning the size of rooms to serve behavioral health situations in an outpatient environment. The housing facilities contribute a great deal to the smooth recovery of patients in a hospital and healthcare nursing homes alike. In outpatient healthcare services, the room size for consultation and residential should meet certain standards. This proposal focuses on the space planning criteria that would help to develop an environment that suits the goal of every behavioral health environment.
Components of a research study
a) The comfort of the patient: The nature of rooms that will host the clients should not come out in a way that makes the clients uncomfortable. The influence of the size of rooms on the behavioral health of a child patient is not the same as that of an adult patient. The space that a recovering child needs will influence their psychological aspect of health and coping. The fact that medical hospitals differ significantly from behavioral healthcare facilities a great deal means that there will be a departure in design features (Devlin, 2015). The need for more natural light in the environment means that the size of the room windows will be larger than for a medical hospital. Besides, there is little need for privacy, and that will mean little or no partitioning in a room.
b) Safety concept in the room: The safety of clients in a behavioral health facility is a critical factor that influences the size of the room. A room should allow clients to move in freely within the same room without feeling any difficulty. In the case of a fire incident, the size of the room should not expose the client to more danger by block access to safe areas within the organization's premises.
c) The number of patients: the minimum and a maximum number of patients that are expected to occupy a given facility matters a great deal in determining the size and designing of the room. If there are plans to increase the number of clients at a future date, it becomes necessary to include that consideration in design factors. The research will focus on the most important factors that will influence the size of the room for posterity reasons.
d) Target groups: The distribution of health challenges is not predictable and therefore, the size of a behavioral health facility should not be specific in design as that can lock other clients unnecessarily.
Validity of study
This research study is justified based on the growing number of patients that need home care services after they are discharged from medical hospitals. The different ages of patients that need space and the different health situation for patients that need rehabilitation have become apparent that space consideration needs reviews. Within the same environment, different clients with different healthcare needs should be contained, and attended to without any challenge. This research will look at the minimum and maximum space requirements that fit all the different health care scenarios expected at any time (Craig, Dixon, & Gannon, 2013).
The size of rooms and related facilities is very crucial because clients need space to exercise and perhaps free movement. Clients who are recovering from roads and physical accidents need space to enhance mobility and to engage in physical therapies. However, their space requirements will not be the same as for clients who are have had surgeries and operations on their bodies. It is through interactions between clients that behavioral health of a client is evaluated as either improving or worsening (Hall, 2006). If a client is improving, space becomes ideal for future and similar cases. However, if a client's case is worsening, a new location with different size is preferred.
Strengths and weaknesses
Strengths
1. The strength of this study the real time situations in already established health facilities are used to inform the design and all the features of the rooms. This approach has the advantage of ensuring that the missing features in previous healthcare facilities are incorporated in this facility. For example, a facility that only targeted children with mental and learning challenges should not have the trouble of having to be relocated to areas where their needs are accommodated.
2. The other strength of this research is that it relies on previous improvements in the field of behavioral health science to inform its decisions. For example, the balance between individual patient privacy and the safety associated with clients in the same room. This feature is very important in enabling the service providers to determine the readiness of a client to reunite with family members (Bland, & Copeland, 2009). For example, if a client has shown the ability to be aware of the surrounding environment and can coexist well with others in the same room, then it is a good sign of recovery. This feature of this research is very crucial in ensuring that a client is leaving the facility to feel isolated or uneasy in the new destination.
Weaknesses
1. The major weaknesses of this study are the fact that it does not establish the reason for variations in environments for military and normal citizens. In a military situation, some of the space requirements that are necessary for an ordinary person are not prioritized, and therefore, privacy is limited. An ordinary client and a military client have different backgrounds, and the contributions of those aspects in their recovery could override the influence of space factor in the health care homes. The fact that the research does not consider other peripheral factors that can combine with space factor to bring an enabling environment makes the study limited and difficult to implement.
You’re 81% through this paper. Sign up to read the full paper.
Sign Up Now — Instant Access Already a member? Log inAlways verify citation format against your institution’s current style guide requirements.