The American College of Healthcare Architects

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Emerging Trends & Successful Strategies for the Planning and Design of Healthcare Facilities This Educational Session Presented by : The American College of Healthcare Architects Improving medical care Environments through Specialty Certification of Healthcare Architects 1

Emerging Trends in Imaging Impacting Health Facility Design Morris Stein, FAIA, FACHA President, The Stein-Cox Group Bill Rostenberg, FAIA, FACHA Principal, Anshen+Allen ACHE 2006 Congress on Healthcare Management March 27-30 2006 2

Emerging Trends & Successful Strategies for the Planning and Design of Healthcare Facilities Part Three: Emerging Trends in Imaging, Impacting Health Facility Design Morris Stein, FAIA, FACHA Founding Partner: Stein-Cox Group, Phoenix, AZ 30 Years experience in Healthcare Architecture Frequent Presenter at RSNA s Annual Conference Bill Rostenberg, FAIA, FACHA Principal: Anshen+ Allen Architects, San Francisco, CA 30 Years experience in Healthcare Architecture Author & Presenter on Healthcare Technologies 3

No matter... What the technology, where it is engaged, or how it impacts our work, there is a fundamental relationship with planning and design. 4

Why is this so important? Explosion in new technology One major manufacturer lists on it s website: 21 new MRI systems and 16 new CT systems 85 total pre-installation guides 5

Why is this so important? Transparent planning and carelessness 6

Why is this so important? Increased patient expectations Radiology featured in broad media, television and the internet. 7

Explore four trends that significantly determine how project design and implementation will be impacted: New Technology New Places New Work New Environments 8

This is a race without a finish line. It is never complete. Every discovery suggests new directions. James Thrall, M.D. Chief of Radiology Massachusetts General Hospital January 31, 2006 9

Just when you thought it was safe... 10

MRI: 1.5T, 3.0T and Beyond 3.0T MRI fields are larger than 1.5T MRI fields but not twice the size. 11

Emerging Trends in Imaging 12

MRI: 1.5T, 3.0T and Beyond 3.0T magnets are less susceptible to moving objects but more susceptible to non-homogeneity. Stable magnetic environments are critical. 13

14

Emerging Trends in Imaging 15

Emerging Trends in Imaging 16

Emerging Trends in Imaging 17

MRI: 1.5T, 3.0T and Beyond At least 50% of 3.0T MRI installations require magnetic shielding and 10 20% will require full room shielding. 18

Emerging Trends in Imaging 19

Emerging Trends in Imaging 20

MRI: 1.5T, 3.0T and Beyond RF shielding degrades over time. 1.5 T to 3.0T upgrade may require a replacement RF shield. 21

MRI: 1.5T, 3.0T and Beyond Acoustics is often overlooked. As gradient power increases, so does noise. Sound mitigating materials, panels and structural details are recommended. 22

64 Slice CT Throughput is so fast, which equates to higher slice counts, and more patients. More use + faster throughput =more shielding Upgrade from 4 slice to 64 slice may require additional radiation protection. 23

64 Slice CT Structural connections due to movement and vibration must be considered. Slab investigation/preparation at any floor level should be anticipated. 24

PET and PET/CT Extremely large doses have a major impact on PET or PET/CT shielding issues. Quiet Rooms, Dressing Rooms, even Toilets may be shielded. Many rooms are undershielded or improperly designed. 25

PET and PET/CT 26

PET and PET/CT 27

Upgrade Checklist Physical Impacts Shielding Impacts Power Requirements Heat Dissipation Remote Equipment Anchorage Sound and Vibration 28

Fusion Imaging Imaging modalities not only emerge, but converge. 29

Functional Imaging Physiologic not structural. 30

New Work Radiologist becomes information specialist (Why, what, where, how) Diagnostic Therapeutic 31

New Environments Increasing expectation that environmental design is directly related to patient satisfaction and staff performance. 32

Perils and Pitfalls Architecture (and architects) may be forgiving, but technology never is. 33

Perils and Pitfalls Building a room for one vendor s system, regardless of modality, does not mean the room will be adequate for another vendor s equipment. 34

Perils and Pitfalls Think 3-D siting for every modality in any room.

Perils and Pitfalls The days of plug and play replacements may be coming to an end. Ultimate flexibility Multiple upgrades 36

Perils and Pitfalls Design teamwork is more important than ever. Nothing should surprise yoube prepared. 37

Don t be Surprised When... You convert an operating suite to a Cath Lab, and a Cath Lab to MRA or CTA. 38

Don t be Surprised When... CT becomes the dominant imaging modality. DR and CR utilization declines to less than 50% imaging volume. 39

Don t be Surprised When... IT advances are equally crucial as slices and Images. 40

Don t be Surprised When... Average imaging study data volume increases to 10.0 gigabyte (1000%). 41

Don t be Surprised When... We finally have advances in shielding materials and applications. 42

The notion of architecture is an effective reminder that design is only one part of the process. -Marc Gerstein 43

Emerging Trends in Imaging Impacting Health Facility Design Imaging Beyond the Radiology Department Image: Sarasota Memorial Hospital Image: University of California San Francisco Bill Rostenberg, FAIA, FACHA Principal, Anshen+Allen ACHE 2006 Congress on Healthcare Management March 27-30 2006 44

Learning Objectives 1. Understand how departmental boundaries are eroding and how facility design can influence multi-specialist collaboration. 2. Recognize where imaging has the greatest impact on facility design beyond the radiology department 3. Become familiar with design concepts that anticipate future convergence of imaging and surgery. 45

Presentation Outline 1...Drivers Influencing New Planning Concepts 2......Imaging in the Operating Room 3..Planning for Future Flexibility and Adaptability 46

Imaging Beyond the Radiology Department Drivers Influencing New Planning Concepts 47

Resource Drivers The Staffing Crisis will continue at many levels: - nurses - technologists - physicians - IT, etc. New types of personnel are evolving in the procedural environment: - Surgical Technologists - Surgical IT Managers - Non-surgical Interventionalists 48

Productivity Drivers 49

Economic Drivers Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 During the 6 months following CMS s 2001 PET reimbursement approval for certain oncology use, PET utilization grew by over 50%... and continues. 50

Technology Drivers Image courtesy of Brigham and Women s Hospital. can accelerate or disrupt collaboration. 51

Political Drivers Competition among surgeons, interventional radiologists and cardiologists continues. Visionary leaders are beginning to mandate multi-specialty collaboration Many specialists are willing to collaborate rather than compete Kingdom of Surgery Kingdom of Imaging Kingdom of Cardiology 52

Market Drivers / Brand & Image 53

Imaging Beyond the Radiology Department Imaging in the Operating Room 54

Growth of Minimally Invasive Surgery Minimal surgical incisions Redefinition of Sterile Field Many procedures similar to interventional radiology (MIS) Increasing reliance on image guidance 55

Greater Interventional Utilization of IR & Cath Suite Historic IR/Cath utilization: 60-70% = diagnostic procedures Many diagnostic IR/Cath procedures now replaced by less-invasive modalities (CT, MR, SPECT, PET/CT, etc.) Future utilization will focus on more interventional procedures 56

Interventional Procedures Require a Surgical-quality Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning (HVAC) requirements Surgical-like restricted workflow requirements Increased Prep / Recovery needs Surgery-like Environment 57

DESIGN IMPLICATIONS Operating Rooms often have sub-optimal lighting conditions Surgeons may need to view medical images at a distance PACS in the OR PACS workstations provide an interface for computer-assisted surgical applications which are used during surgery 58

Information Technology in the OR DESIGN IMPLICATIONS 59

DESIGN IMPLICATIONS MRI in the OR MAGNET TYPES Stationary Pivoting Traveling Portable ROOM TYPES Single Room Dual Room Many Rooms 60

MRI/OR in One Integrated Room RF shield entire room Imaging and Procedure Zone (MR compatible surgical instruments) Stationary Magnet Image: courtesy of Brigham and Women s Hospital 61

MRI/OR in One Integrated Room RF shield entire room Imaging Zone Image: BrainLab Procedure Zone Pivoting Magnet Couch 62

MRI/OR in One Integrated Room RF shield entire room Imaging Zone Image: University of Minnesota Procedure Zone Traveling Patient 63

Separate MRI and OR Rooms RF shield magnet room only Imaging Zone Image: University of California San Francisco Procedure Zone Traveling Patient Source: ETS/Lindgren 64

MRI/OR in One Integrated Room RF shield entire room (or only the surgical zone) Imaging and Procedure Zone (MR compatible surgical instruments) Portable Magnet Source: Odin Medical / Medtronics 65

MRI/OR in One Integrated Room RF shield entire room Foothills Medical Centre, Calgary Alberta Courtesy of Stantec Architects, Ltd. Calgary, AB Traveling Magnet 66

MRI/OR in One Integrated Room RF shield entire room Courtesy of Stantec Architects, Ltd. Calgary, AB Traveling Magnet 67

Integrated MR / OR / PET Rooms RF shield magnet room only MR Imaging Zone Procedure Zone Image: courtesy of Brigham and Women s Hospital PET Imaging Zone Traveling Patient 68

Integrated MR / OR / PET Rooms DESIGN IMPLICATIONS: RF shield magnet room only Design for MRI safety (ACR safety guidelines) Locate MRI for either scrubbed or street clothes access Protect against RF and/or magnetic interactions with adjacent occupants Increase structural, air and cooling capacities Images: courtesy of Brigham and Women s Hospital Traveling Patient 69

Imaging Beyond the Radiology Department Planning for Future Flexibility & Adaptability 70

Integrated Interventional Platform Endoscopy IR / Cath Surgery Level 2 Recovery PACU Shared prep/ recovery Intake/ Prep 71

Flexible Planning Modules 72

Clean Core or Staff Core 73

Flexible Rooms & Procedure Pods 74

Flexible Red Line 75

Flexible Prep/PACU 76

Flexible Prep/PACU 77

Flexible Prep/PACU AM RECOVERY AM PREP 78

Flexible Prep/PACU PM RECOVERY 79

ORs with Control Rooms 80

ORs with Control Rooms OR/IR/Cath Supply Room OR/IR/Cath Sub-sterile Control Room Sub-sterile OR/IR/Cath Supply Room OR/IR/Cath 81

ORs with Control Rooms 82

ORs with Control Rooms Support Team Patient Scrubbed Team Supplies Control Room Sub-sterile 83

Flexible Procedure Room Clusters OR C. Supply OR Control OR Sub-Ster OR 84

Flexible Procedure Room Clusters OR C. Supply OR Control OR Sub-Ster OR 85

Flexible Procedure Room Clusters OR C. Supply OR Control OR Sub-Ster MRI 86

Flexible Procedure Room Clusters OR OR C. Supply Control Sub-Ster OR OR OR OR C. Supply Sub-Ster Control OR OR 87

Flexible Procedure Room Clusters OR OR C. Supply Control Sub-Ster OR MRI PET/CT OR C. Supply Sub-Ster Control OR OR 88

OR of the Future (Richard Satava, MD) Continuity-of-care extends from the patient s first encounter until discharge. With current scanning technology it is possible to get an information representation of the patient. * source: Satava, RM: The Operating Room of the Future: Observations and Commentary ; Seminars in Laparoscopic Surgery; vol. 10; no 3; 2003 pp. 99-105 Image: courtesy of R. Satava, MD 89

OR of the Future (Richard Satava, MD)..then pushes the operate button and a perfect operation is performed, with all the errors edited out. * source: Satava, RM: The Operating Room of the Future: Observations and Commentary ; Seminars in Laparoscopic Surgery; vol. 10; no 3; 2003 pp. 99-105 Image: courtesy of R. Satava, MD 90

OR of the Future (Richard Satava, MD) OR personnel of the future.. Surgeon Assistant Scrub Nurse Circulating Nurse.. In the OR of the future, there are no people (except the anesthetized patient).. source: Satava, RM: The Operating Room of the Future: Observations and Commentary ; Seminars in Laparoscopic Surgery; vol. 10; no 3; 2003 pp. 99-105 Image: courtesy of R. Satava, MD 91

Conclusions 1. Architectural design must anticipate new types of personnel and new workflow patterns, as traditional departmental boundaries erode 2. Innovative design that incorporates advanced communications technology can sometimes compensate for staff shortages and improve operational efficiency 3. Future flexibility is best accommodated by identifying a future technology zone, rather than by detailed planning for future technology 92

Emerging Trends & Successful Strategies for the Planning and Design of Healthcare Facilities Bibliography: Imaging & Facility Planning The Architecture of Medical Imaging, John Wiley and Sons, June 2006, Bill Rostenberg Surgology is Coming, Health Facility Management, June 2005, Bill Rostenberg Imaging Evolution: Meeting the Department's Changing Design Requirement, Health Facility Management, March 2003, Morris A. Stein and Bill Rostenberg. The New Face of Imaging; Is Your Facility Ready?, Health Facility Management, July 1996, Catherine Quayle. Visionary Planning for the Radiology Department of the Future, Radiographics, March 1996, Morris A. Stein. 93

Emerging Trends & Successful Strategies for the Planning and Design of Healthcare Facilities Speaker Contact Information: Morris Stein, FAIA, FACHA The Stein-Cox Group 821 North Central Avenue Phoenix, AZ, 85004-2004 (602) 462-0966 mostein@stein-cox.com Bill Rostenberg, FAIA, FACHA Anshen + Allen 901 Market Street San Francisco, CA, 94103 415-281-5459 bill.rostenberg@anshen.com 94