FEATURE ARTICLES
A blueprint for smaller local acute hospitals
Giving his presentation as one of three speakers in a Architects for Health (AfH)-led session addressing the broader topic of “How to achieve excellence in an age of austerity” at last October’s Healthcare Estates conference, Mungo Smith, a founding director and design lead at leading UK healthcare architects MAAP, discussed a booklet he recently co-authored with Andy Black, chair of international healthcare strategic consultancy Durrow, and Johannes Eggen, a partner at NSW Architects and Planners in Oslo.
Texas facility’s worldfirst ‘green’ milestone
Healthcare facilities use nearly twice as much energy per square foot as office buildings, according to American HVAC and air handling equipment manufacturer Temtrol (citing statistics from the country’s Green Building Council).
Turbulence ahead without proper skills
A high-level initiative involving all 36 UK engineering institutes aimed at “ensuring the health of all areas of education and training that bear on the formation and progress of engineers” has now been under way for nearly 18 months.
Legionella – fighting a resourceful foe
In a presentation given at a recent IHEEM seminar, “Total water management within healthcare premises”, held at London’s Royal Society of Arts, David Harper, one of the UK’s leading independent experts in Legionella,
Maintaining control is team’s vital role
In an article based on the “Best Paper” at the Institute of Hospital Engineering Australia’s (IHEA) 61st National Conference 2010, Dr Liz Haywood, PhD, MIHEA, Chris Frankel, and Andrew Johns, BTech, MIHEA – BMS group, Bendigo Health Building and Infrastructure Division, examine the group’s part in a project involving the design, build, installation, and commissioning, of two new negative pressure suites at Bendigo Health in Victoria.
Mission Bay facility’s quest to be greener
A new integrated 289-bed hospital complex in San Francisco, the first phase of which is set for completion in 2014, will embrace a wide range of sustainable technologies and principles, with the key to the design being early involvement with, and buy-in from, all parties involved, to, a projectspecific “sustainability plan”.
Third retirement after road well travelled
IHEEM London branch chairman John Crawford retired from full-time employment recently after 49 years, almost to the day, as an electrical engineer, having worked for organisations ranging from a sizeable London regional health authority to London Regional Transport.
Turnkey offering a claimed sector ‘first’
Manufacturer and supplier of LED theatre lights, HD camera systems, video integration technologies, and ceiling support units, Trumpf Medical Systems UK, and “logistical services” company Canute International Medical Services (CIMS), one of whose specialities is providing mobile medical units for diagnostic imaging, have entered into a partnership that will see the two companies offer fully fitted out modular operating theatres and other medical/clinical buildings incorporating the latest technology and equipment, on a fully project-managed, “turnkey” basis.
Managing EMC within healthcare facilities
Damon High, a consultant at international testing, certification, qualification, training, and consultancy services provider TÜV Product Service, examines the issue of electromagnetic interference in hospitals, highlighting the areas that equipment suppliers and estates and facilities managers/healthcare engineers need to consider to ensure both the continuing safe, reliable operation of equipment, and compliance with the latest legislation.
Harnessing science to improve safety
Examining the effectiveness of various wet surface cleaning methods in combating harmful microorganisms in a hospital ward, understanding different healthcare cleaning regimes’ impact on reducing slips and trips, evaluating the protection offered by surgical masks against influenza bioaerosols, and independently testing tower crane safety following a number of fatal incidents, are among the broad spectrum of recent projects undertaken by the Buxton-headquartered Health and Safety Laboratory (HSL).
Making hospital water safe, examined
What are the best methods for monitoring hospital water systems to prevent contamination by waterborne pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Legionella?
Kilimanjaro through the keyhole
Amanda Parkin, marketing manager at approved design and build consultant to the NHS for integrated theatres and digital video communications, OR Networks, explains how, with the help of the company and its specialist equipment, Northumbrian surgeons successfully established a two-way audio/video link to their counterparts at a hospital in the foothills of Mount Kilimanjaro to enable them to train the Tanzanian surgeons in laparoscopic surgery.
Reducing risk through ‘not cutting corners’
A comprehensive introduction to water risk and legislation, with a particular focus on the challenges in healthcare, was provided by Blane Judd, chief executive of the Chartered Institute of Plumbing and Heating Engineering (CIPHE), at a recent IHEEM seminar in London.
‘Strategic approach’ can reveal benefits
Speaking at last October’s Healthcare Estates 2010 conference in Manchester, Peter Haggarty, assistant director, Health Facilities Scotland, outlined some of the key steps and priorities for large healthcare providers seeking to establish and implement an effective asset management strategy, focusing particularly on work ongoing in this area in the Scottish public health service.
ProCure21+ should speed scheme starts
This October saw the launch of the new ProCure21+ National Framework under which, the Department of Health (DH) team behind the new scheme claims, the NHS can potentially save a further £200 million of public money on top of the substantial sums saved under predecessor, ProCure21, via faster, more streamlined procurement, design, planning, and construction, of publicly-funded healthcare schemes.
Radical 10-point plan to refocus NHS estate
Conor Ellis, head of health, Ed Baldwin, partner, and Rachel Dick, consultant, at international built asset consultancy EC Harris, present a “10-step guide” to help the NHS achieve radical efficiency savings, optimise the use of its estate, maximise the value of under-utilised land, buildings, and other assets, and harness better value from its existing FM operations.
Ventilation first for Melbourne hospital
Infection control is a paramount concern for hospitals worldwide. AECOM engineers in Australia designed the first ever displacement ventilation solution for a Melbourne hospital, researching how materials and systems can assist management of, and reduce, infection transmission within healthcare environments. HEJ reports.
‘Adrenaline’ mollifies earthquake’s impact
Alan Bavis, facilities and engineering manager at New Zealand’s Canterbury District Health Board (CDHB), based in Christchurch, explains how well-rehearsed contingency planning procedures, reliable, well-maintained plant, and an “excellent team spirit”, combined with “sheer adrenaline”, helped he and his estates team keep vital hospital services running in the aftermath of the major earthquake which hit the country’s South Island in September this year.
A cool head ensures smooth MRI delivery
Pioneering “state-of-the-art mobile” diagnostic technology, Cobalt claims its mobile MRI service is among the world’s most sophisticated charity-run operations of its kind. However, with its fleet of units constantly deployed at, or moving between, hospitals across the South West of England and Wales, the charity faces a potential logistical nightmare.
Pride in the job shines through at Cumnock
The PFI model has undoubtedly had its critics since the first PFI-funded healthcare facilities began appearing in the UK in the early 1990s, but, supporters emphasise, without PFI funding many much-needed hospitals would never have been built, and they point to numerous examples today of good PFI hospitals delivering an excellent service to their local community.
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