Healthcare design is undergoing a revolutionary transformation. How can we create healing environments that embrace innovation, celebrate human diversity, and serve everyone in our communities? From reimagining cancer care delivery to integrating infection-resistant materials and sustainable product solutions, how can thoughtful design enhance the experience of patients, families, caregivers and clinical staff? With compassion and curiosity, host Cheryl Janis interviews the world's top wellness leaders and healthcare design professionals who are challenging conventional thinking and creating spaces that heal, nurture, and welcome all. Join us as we explore groundbreaking innovations and human-centered approaches that are reshaping the future of healthcare...
Mon, March 03, 2025
"Certification enhances your credibility and your expertise in healthcare interior design. It distinguishes you from non-certified healthcare interior designers that are practicing in the healthcare design space and illustrates the amount of knowledge to deliver these types of environments." —Megan McNally on The Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast Step into the world of healthcare design certification, where interior designers develop specialized expertise to create healing environments that protect patients and improve outcomes. In this informative episode, host Cheryl Janis sits down with Stephanie Fallon, President-Elect, and Megan McNally, President of the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers (AAHID), who share insights about the path to becoming a Certified Healthcare Interior Designer (CHID). From understanding the rigorous examination process to exploring the unique challenges of healthcare environments, Stephanie and Megan reveal why specialized certification has become increasingly critical in an industry where design directly impacts patient safety, infection control, and healing. Their combined 30+ years of experience creating award-winning healthcare spaces illuminates why certified designers are essential members of any healthcare project team. Discover how AAHID's certification process is elevating the standard of healthcare design nationwide and creating a community of professionals dedicated to advancing evidence-based design practices. This conversation will give you a comprehensive understanding of how specialized certification is transforming healthcare environments and improving outcomes for patients and staff alike. Learn more about the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers at: https://aahid.org/ Stephanie Fallon serves as Director of Interiors and Associate Partner at PhiloWilke Partnership, with 15 years specializing in Healthcare and Health Science Interiors. Megan McNally is the Director of Interior Design at RYAN Companies, where she leads their National Healthcare Interior Design Practice. She was recently recognized as Healthcare Design's HCD10 in the Interior Design category. In this enlightening conversation, Cheryl, Stephanie, and Megan explore: The mission and 20-year history of the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers (AAHID) and its role in certifying healthcare design professionals The comprehensive CHID examination process that tests designers' knowledge of critical healthcare environments, from acute care to ambulatory and residential settings The two distinct pathways to CHID certification,
Tue, January 21, 2025
"When somebody shows you who they truly are, believe them the first time. From the very beginning, we took Emory at their word when they said they wanted to design and build a cancer center never before seen or imagined." —Anthony Treu on The Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast Step into a world where healthcare spaces nurture healing, empower caregivers, and transform the patient experience. In this inspiring episode, host Cheryl Janis sits down with visionary healthcare architect Anthony Treu, AIA, ACHA, LEED AP, Principal and Healthcare Practice Leader at Skidmore Owings and Merrill (SOM), who is revolutionizing how we think about healthcare design. From a fourth-grader sketching houses to the one of the architects behind award-winning cancer centers at SOM, Anthony shares the remarkable journey of creating spaces that combine cutting-edge innovation with profound human comfort. He and his teams’ work on the groundbreaking Emory Winship Cancer Center in Atlanta, Georgia shows us what's possible when we dare to reimagine healthcare delivery from the ground up. Discover how Anthony and his team are creating healthcare environments that feel less like institutions and more like sanctuaries of healing, where high-tech innovation meets human-centered design. This conversation will leave you believing in the power of architecture to transform the healthcare experience. Learn more about Anthony Treu and SOM's pioneering healthcare architecture projects at: https://www.som.com/ . SOM partnered with May Architecture, https://www.mayarchitecture.com/ on the Emory Winship Cancer Center project. Anthony credits this collaboration as a cornerstone of the project's success, combining SOM's innovative approach with May Architecture's specialized clinical design expertise. In this enlightening conversation, Cheryl and Anthony explore: The revolutionary spirit behind Emory Winship Cancer Center, where traditional cancer care was completely reimagined to put patients first How rethinking the basic layout of cancer care reduced treatment planning from weeks to a single day The stunning results of patient-centered design: registration times cut in half, satisfaction scores soaring into the 90th percentile, and staff retention improving by 10% The beautiful balance of creating spaces that feel both technologically advanced and warmly inviting How questioning core assumptions – like "Do we rea
Tue, December 03, 2024
"There’s a great saying among the neurodivergent community. If you've met one person with autism, you've met one person with autism." -Kati Peditto on The Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 Meet Dr. Kati Peditto, an environmental psychologist and Senior Design Researcher at DLR Group who's transforming how we think about neurodivergent design. Featured in The Washington Post , The Atlantic , and The BBC, Kati brings both professional expertise and personal experience as someone with AuDHD to this vital conversation about creating truly inclusive spaces. Join host Cheryl Janis for an illuminating discussion that will challenge everything you thought you knew about healthcare design. Get ready to discover why designing for neurodivergence goes far beyond quiet rooms and sensory spaces, the surprising ways our environments affect behavior - from ICU alarms to office kitchen smells, and how a 49-day cross-country run shaped her revolutionary approach to healthcare spaces. Whether you're a designer, healthcare professional, or someone passionate about creating more inclusive spaces, this conversation will open your eyes to the profound impact of thoughtful, evidence-based design. Join us for an unforgettable journey into what's new in healthcare design with Dr. Kati Peditto! Want to Learn More? Learn more about Dr. Kati Peditto and DLR by visiting this link: https://www.dlrgroup.com/ Connect with Kati: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/katipeditto/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pedittophd/ Ready to have your perspective transformed? In this episode, Cheryl and Kati explore: The eye-opening truth about neurodivergence: Why it's so much more than today's "hot topic" The surprising differences between male and female presentations How neurodivergent minds process environments differently What designers often miss when creating "inclusive" spaces Game-changing design insights: The unexpected reason office kitchen locations matter more than acoustics Why traditional "quiet rooms" aren't enough <p dir="ltr" role
Tue, October 01, 2024
"I decided I should go back to school for interior design because someone should be designing these spaces who knew what it was like to work in them. And I decided it would be me." —Teri Lura-Bennett Step into the world of evidence-based healthcare design with host Cheryl Janis and an all-star lineup of experts: Donna Deckard, Director of the EDAC program at the Center for Health Design; Barbara Dellinger, a veteran healthcare interior designer with over 40 years of experience and Teri Lura-Bennett, a unique blend of registered nurse and acclaimed healthcare interior designer. Our guests dive deep into the often-overlooked yet critical world of hospital flooring and surfaces, sharing eye-opening stories of trials, failures, and triumphs. Learn how a single flooring decision can impact patient safety, staff efficiency, and maintenance costs for years to come. Discover the power of evidence-based design as our experts reveal how meticulous research and real-world testing are revolutionizing healthcare environments. From navigating the complexities of material selection to accessing reliable, up-to-date information, this episode equips you with the knowledge to make informed decisions that go beyond aesthetics. Whether you're a seasoned healthcare designer or new to the field, you'll gain invaluable insights to elevate your next project and create spaces that are not just beautiful, but safer and more effective. Learn more about The Swiss Cheese Model that Teri mentions here: https://thedecisionlab.com/reference-guide/management/swiss-cheese-model Learn more about the EBD process of Finding and Conducting Research that Donna shares by viewing and downloading this .PDF: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QhBFnumvnfe16CwkOhkpWqM6KYikZ5MU/view?usp=sharing Learn more about The Center for Health Design and the EDAC Certification by visiting: https://www.healthdesign.org/ . LinkedIn Contact Info for Guests: Barbara Delinger: https://www.linkedin.com/in/barbara-dellinger-9697b613/ Teri Lura Bennett: https://www.linkedin.com/in/teri-bennett-61306925/ Donna Deckard: https://www.linkedin.com/in/donna-deckard-6b38318/ In today’s episode, Cheryl and her guests discuss the following: Barbara shares a riveting story about helping to save the
S2 E63 · Tue, July 16, 2024
"She's actually going to be 100 years old. My father's parents are both Holocaust survivors. She survived. And it was a journey to survive, but her outlook on life has always been one of hope. And that has resonated with me throughout my life.” —Cheryl Lauren Spigler on The Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast Today, we're diving into the world of compassionate design with Cheryl Lauren Spigler, a visionary Senior Design Leader at NELSON Worldwide. Get ready for an inspiring journey as host Cheryl Janis and her special guest, Cheryl Lauren Spigler, explore the art of creating healing spaces that touch the heart and soul. Cheryl Lauren Spigler shares the power of empathy in healthcare design, innovative approaches to creating spaces that resonate with the human experience, and bridging hospitality and healthcare design principles for transformative environments. This is a deeply meaningful conversation you won’t want to miss on the life altering power of thoughtful healthcare design! Learn more about Cheryl Lauren Spigler and NELSON Worldwide by visiting: https://www.nelsonworldwide.com/ . Find Cheryl on LinkedIn here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cheryl-lauren-spigler-rid-ncidq-iida-27391310/ In Cheryl’s conversation with Cheryl Lauren Spigler, they discuss: Cheryl Lauren Spigler's background as a healthcare and hospitality interior designer with over 19 years of experience. Her approach to creating spaces that resonate with the human experience and evoke emotion The importance of asking clients how they want a space to feel and using exercises to extract design concepts. Examples of projects where Cheryl achieved a higher level of design, including a hospitality project balancing luxury and nature, and a healthcare project designed to welcome diverse populations. How Cheryl's experiences in hospitality design have influenced her approach to healthcare environments. The use of empathy in the design process, especially for healthcare spaces. Cheryl's journey into interior design, starting in communications and eventually discovering her passion for the field. The influence of her Holocaust survivor grandmother as a s
Tue, June 11, 2024
"The saying is if you want to go fast, go alone, but if you want to go far, go together. And together is the way you create change.” –Debra Levin on The Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 On today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Debra Levin, Hon FASID, EDAC, President and Chief Executive Officer at The Center for Health Design. Lean in and listen to this exciting conversation about how The Center is adapting and expanding its initiatives to facilitate collaboration and knowledge-sharing between the healthcare, design, and product manufacturing sectors. A key focus is how The Center is building bridges across these communities through multidisciplinary events, research partnerships, and new specialized network groups like Pediatric Environment Network (PEN), Resilient Aging Environments Network (RAEN), and Behavioral Mental Health Environment Network. Learn more about The Center’s member resources like The Knowledge Repository and how it has been driving innovation and improving healthcare environments in the post-COVID era. Learn more about The Center for Health Design by visiting: https://www.healthdesign.org/ . Reach out to Debra Levin directly by sending her an email to: dlevin@healthdesign.org . In Cheryl’s conversation with Debra Levin they discuss: What’s new and changing at The Center that is influencing the healthcare design industry? Learn about The Center’s new "environment networks" or membership groups that have been created around specific healthcare settings, like the Pediatric Environment Network (PEN), Resilient Aging Environments Network (RAIN) , and the Behavioral Mental Health Environment Network. Learn about the small groups fostering collaboration across sectors and how this aligns with The Center’s goal of facilitating multidisciplinary conversations. What is the PDC Summit and how has The Center become a strategic education partner with the PDC, hosted by ASHE, for the first time in 2024? The Center’s strategic planning after COVID to engage a global audience more effectively. The Center’s latest focus on building bridges between healthcare, design, and product manufacturing communities. Learn about the new search functionality on The Center’s website, added to improve accessibility. <p dir="ltr" role="presentation"
Tue, April 23, 2024
“As providers pursue the value-based model, they have to be mindful of the fact that it cannot compromise the patient experience, and in fact, should compliment the patient experience to the extent possible, as they continue to drive cost down.” – Peter C. Yesawich on the Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast On today’s episode of the podcast, Cheryl interviews Peter C. Yesawich, PhD and Stowe Shoemaker, PhD; authors of the book, Hospitable HealthcareTM; Just What the Patient Ordered! Peter and Stowe unpack the book in this wonderful and deep conversation about how healthcare can benefit greatly from hospitality in new and unique ways. Learn about the authors’ PAEER model detailed in their book, and how it can transform healthcare, in ways that may surprise you. Enjoy the episode! Learn more about Stowe Shoemaker and Peter C. Yesawichs’ book Hospitable Healthcare™Just What the Patient Ordered!, here: https://hospitablehealthcare.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Peter and Stowe, they discuss: What are hospitals doing right these days? What needs to change and why? Examples of empathetic and compassionate patient care in history Peter and Stowe unpack their new book - "Hospitable Healthcare™Just What the Patient Ordered!" What was the inspiration behind the book and who is the book for? How does the book benefit healthcare designers, planners, and architects? Peter shares influential stories and real life experiences that inspired "Hospitable Healthcare™Just What the Patient Ordered!" What is the PAEER model detailed in their book, and how can it transform healthcare? Learn the key hospitality principles for enhancing healthcare experience and the “servicescape” concept What does rewarding patient loyalty in healthcare look like? Peter and Stowe share stories and examples. What are some effective ways to encourage and manage patient feedback and reviews? Peter and Stowe’s advice for healthcare leaders adopting the PAEER model What is the alignment of the book’s PAEER
Tue, October 17, 2023
On part 1 of today’s episode Cheryl interviews Sarah Tetens NCIDQ, RID, IIDA, CHID, EDAC, Design Director at Baskervill. In part 1 of their conversation, Sarah shares in detail what design life is like in the healthcare space post COVID, what design challenges are still present and why mental health is one of her passions. This and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design in part 1 of today’s episode! Learn more about Sarah Tetens and Baskervill by visiting: https://baskervill.com/ . Send Sarah a direct email here: stetens@baskervill.com Learn more about Women in Healthcare’s Florida Chapter by visiting: https://florida.womeninhealthcare.org/about/ . Email: florida@womeninhealthcare.org Visit Women In Healthcare online here: https://www.womeninhealthcare.org/ . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Sarah Tetens, they discuss: Sarah shares what have been the most significant changes that COVID has brought to the field of healthcare design and specifically her work at Baskervill. Sarah shares the positive changes COVID has brought about in the consideration of the design of the built environment in healthcare that affect patients, their families, staff and caretakers in a new way. Learn how touchpoints have been eliminated without negatively impacting the operations of hospital staff. What became more challenging in design post COVID? Why is mental health important to Sarah and how does it play a role in her projects? How can healthcare design support how people feel when they walk into a healthcare facility, how staff feel at work all day and how guests feel when they’re anxiously waiting for a loved one to go through a procedure? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry
Sun, October 15, 2023
In part 2 of today’s episode, Cheryl continues her conversation with Sarah Tetens NCIDQ, RID, IIDA, CHID, EDAC, Design Director at Baskervill. They dig deeper into how empathy and compassion play a role in Sarah’s work, why healthcare is purposeful and how that shows up with the people who choose healthcare as their career. This and so much more about the changing face of healthcare design on part 2 of today’s show! Learn more about Sarah Tetens and Baskervill by visiting: https://baskervill.com/ . Send Sarah a direct email here: stetens@baskervill.com Learn more about Women in Healthcare’s Florida Chapter by visiting: https://florida.womeninhealthcare.org/about/ . Email : florida@womeninhealthcare.org Visit Women In Healthcare online here: https://www.womeninhealthcare.org/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Sarah Tetens, they discuss: Sarah generously shares that her work in healthcare is purposeful, and the idea that everyone in healthcare – from nurse to technician to designer – is passionate about “doing good” is perhaps her favorite aspect of the work. How do empathy and compassion play a role in Sarah’s work and when are setting boundaries important? Who is Baskervill and what is its focus? What has Sarah’s journey been like and how did she find healthcare design? What did Sarah learn from her experience in retail that has informed her work in healthcare? Learn more about the AAHID (The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers) and Sarah’s role on the Board of Directors What is it like for Sarah to sit on the Board of Directors, Women in Healthcare’s Florida Chapter? Listen to Sarah share her experience as a mentor to SeminalState ID kids, and why this work is so important Shout-Outs 12:13: Ana Pinto Alexander, Executive VP at HKS Architects 17:22 The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers (AAHID) 23:03 Women in Healthcare 28:55 Seminole State ID Students The world is changing quickly. The C
Tue, September 12, 2023
On part 1 of today’s episode Cheryl interviews Erika Hill, IIDA, NCIDQ, Senior Interior Designer, McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture and Minta Ferguson, ACHA, AIA, NCARB, Director of Planning, McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture. Cheryl says, “The most fascinating piece of part 1 in today’s interview is learning all the details of how and when the work of these two highly specialized professionals intersects within the same healthcare projects. How do these two women, with very different objectives and goals within a complex healthcare project, work together to ensure the project is smooth and inclusive of everyone’s perspective?” This and so much more about today’s world of healthcare design from these two brilliant women on part 1 of today’s episode! Learn more about Minta Ferguson and Erika Hill by visiting: https://mcmillanpazdansmith.com/ . Listen to McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture’s podcast; Idea Exchange, Ideas Shaping Healthcare here: https://mcmillanpazdansmith.com/podcasts/healthcare/ . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Minta and Erika, they discuss: Who are Erika Hill and Minta Ferguson and how does their specialized work within McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture intersect on projects? How does the concept of collaboration play a vital role within Minta and Erika’s projects and what does a collaborative moment look like for these two? Why is it important for Minta and Erika to understand that everyone on a project consumes knowledge differently? Are meetings an organic process for Minta and Erika or are they set in how they flow and function? When is it important to ‘push the envelope’ on a project? How do Minta and Erika resolve ‘healthy conflicts’ on a project? What does it mean to build trust in relationships in Minta and Erika’s work? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this po
Tue, September 12, 2023
On part 2 of today’s episode, Cheryl continues her conversation with Erika Hill, IIDA, NCIDQ, Senior Interior Designer, McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture and Minta Ferguson, ACHA, AIA, NCARB, Director of Planning, McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture. In part 2 Minta and Erika flush out all the juicy details of their work on their favorite projects both together and separately and what made those projects so special to each of them. This and so much more about what’s happening in healthcare design today on part 2 of today’s episode of the Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast! Learn more about Minta Ferguson and Erika Hill by visiting: https://mcmillanpazdansmith.com/ . Listen to McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture’s podcast; Idea Exchange, Ideas Shaping Healthcare, here: https://mcmillanpazdansmith.com/podcasts/healthcare/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Erika Hill and Minta Ferguson they discuss: What are Erika and Minta’s current favorite projects and why? Learn about the technical aspects of some of the design on their projects and how detail oriented healthcare design and planning really is. How did McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture win their Teen Cancer America project? Hear all the details about TCA and the project itself and another related project What is different about designing a cancer unit for teens? How Minta and Erika know when a project is successful from what the end users have to say about it. What does a holistic design process look like to Erika? What does the future of healthcare design and planning look like to these two? Learn about McMillan Pazdan Smith Architecture’s podcast, Idea Exchange, Ideas Shaping Healthcare, where Minta is the host. The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.o
Thu, June 22, 2023
“We are seeing that they are greatly reduced in size. People are now able to check-in online. You are able to go into your space when it is your turn. Gone are the days of sitting in that bus station elbow to elbow, waiting room so we are seeing a reduction in size.” –Cam Twohey on The Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast Cheryl’s guest today on the podcast is Cam Twohey, AIA, WELL AP, NCARB, Associate Principal, Senior Project Architect at Kahler Slater. On today’s episode, Cam shares the number one significant change that COVID created in healthcare design in her work including the end of waiting rooms, her favorite current projects at Kahler Slater, her volunteer work at The American Institute of Architects and so much more! Sit back, relax and enjoy Cheryl’s conversation with Cam Twohey on today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0! Learn more about Cam Twohey, AIA, WELL AP, NCARB, Associate Principal, Senior Project Architect, Kahler Slater by visiting: https://www.kahlerslater.com/ In Cheryl’s conversation with Cam Twohey, they discuss: What has changed most significantly in the last two years since COVID in healthcare that is affecting Cam’s work Why are waiting rooms a thing of the past and what has replaced them? Cam’s favorite current project and why What’s it like when Cam works with many others on a project? How is Cam’s role different at Kahler Slater then it was at her former employment as Senior Project Architect at HOK? Did healthcare find Cam or did Cam find healthcare? Learn about her path to healthcare. What’s it like for Cam to volunteer at The American Institute of Architects and how can you get involved? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers <p d
Tue, January 17, 2023
Cheryl’s guests today on the podcast are two very special souls; Bryan Langlands, FAIA, FACHA, EDAC, LEED GA Principal NBBJ Architecture and Edwin Beltran NCIDQ, FIIDA, ASSOC. AIA, Partner, Lead Interior Designer, NBBJ Architecture. In part 1 of today’s episode, Bryan shares the concept of “Moments of Generosity in Planning” and how, without comprising the budget, this method of planning, deeply improves the experience of patients and caregivers alike in ways you might not think of. Edwin shares the design concept he practices called Essentialism and how it plays a role in a value driven design. This and so much more about what’s happening now in healthcare design, planning and architecture on part 1 of today’s episode. Learn more about Bryan Langlands, Edwin Beltran and NBBJ by visiting: http://www.nbbj.com/ . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Bryan and Edwin, they discuss: What happened during COVID and more specifically, what NBBJ projects failed? With COVID, design budgets were slashed in healthcare projects. Learn how Bryan responded by creating what he calls, “Moments of Generosity in Planning.” Listen to Bryan share examples of “Moments of Generosity” including what the benefits are of bringing light (from strategically placed windows) into the nursing station and caregivers areas of a hospital? What are the financial benefits of using “Moments of Generosity in Planning?” What does Edwin mean when he says, “Economy is extremely important today without compromising a value driven design or decreasing the budget?” Edwin has referred to the word “Essentialism” to describe his approach to design with current projects. What is Essentialism and how does it play a role in a value driven design? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how to become a Certified Healthcare Interior Designer® by visiting the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers at: https://aahid.org/ . Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at <a href= "https://w
Tue, January 17, 2023
On Part 2 of today’s episode, Cheryl continues her rich and deep conversation with Bryan Langlands, FAIA, FACHA, EDAC, LEED GA, Principal NBBJ Architecture and Edwin Beltran NCIDQ, FIIDA, ASSOC. AIA, Partner, Lead Interior Designer, NBBJ Architecture. Edwin shares the deeper meaning of Essentialism in Design and what it means to humanity. Bryan shares how he led the charge in addressing the dilemma of overcrowding in our nation’s emergency departments by calling for the recognition of a new type of treatment space for lower-acuity patients. Part 2 of today’s conversation will continue to inspire and warm your heart. Learn more about Bryan Langlands, Edwin Beltran and NBBJ by visiting: http://www.nbbj.com/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Bryan Langlands and Edwin Beltran they discuss: Edwin dives deeper into the concept of Essentialism in Design and gives specific examples of how this approach creates the sense of belonging and connection. How does color and texture achieve the sense of warmth and belonging? Essentialism is a branch of minimalism, but how is Essentialism different from minimalism? Bryan is a prolific and generous influencer of healthcare in many ways. What does he mean when he says, “What I find interesting is that we can effect change and regulation.” Brian shares more about what he has learned from sitting on a Guideline Committee that sets guidelines every 4 years in healthcare. Bryan leads the charge in addressing the dilemma of overcrowding in our nation’s emergency departments by calling for the recognition of a new type of treatment space for lower-acuity patients. His push for delivering “the right care at the right time in the right place” is resulting in the first major change to emergency department allowable requirements via the Facility Guidelines Institute (FGI) regulatory guidelines, which set the minimum requirements enforced in 44 states and federal agencies. What is Edwin seeing regarding FGI Regulatory Guidelines? How did Edwin and Bryan arrive at their careers in healthcare? Learn about their origin stories. What does the future of healthcare and architecture design hold from Edwin and Bryan’s perspective? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design <
Wed, December 14, 2022
On today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Karen S. Freeman, AIA, ACHA, NCIDQ, EDAC, LEED AP BD+C Practice Leader, Healthcare, at HOK –a global design, architecture, engineering and planning firm. Karen is also the incoming President for the national organization, Women In Healthcare - a nonprofit dedicated to promoting the professional development of women in the healthcare industry. There’s a lot to share from Cheryl and Karen’s inspiring conversation including the importance of designing for mental health, and why it matters so much in today’s world. Learn more about Karen S. Freeman and HOK by visiting https://www.hok.com/ . Learn more about Women in Healthcare by visiting https://www.womeninhealthcare.org/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Karen S. Freeman, they discuss: The changes that took place in Karen’s world when COVID hit the United States in 2020. Specifically, what changed with Karen’s pediatric and subspecialty projects? What did Karen learn from the pandemic? Karen wrote an article for HOK entitled, “Pediatric Mental Health Crisis Needs Bold Design Strategy” that addressed the needs of children during the pandemic through the design of the built environment. Learn what the article is all about. Has the situation in the mental healthcare space improved now that we are in 2022? What still needs to happen to help kids in the mental health space and what progress has been made. What is Karen’s sweet spot in the work she does at HOK? Karen holds a Six Sigma Lean Black Belt in Healthcare (LBBH) and she is one of fewer than 450 board-certified healthcare architects in the U.S. per the American College of Healthcare Architects (ACHA). How does Karen bring all of this together on her healthcare projects? Listen to Karen talk about her incoming role as the new President of the national organization, Women in Healthcare. What does the organization do and offer? Learn about Karen’s origin story and how she came to specialize in pediatric healthcare and why this theme holds a special place in her heart. The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference
Tue, May 31, 2022
Cheryl’s special guest today on the podcast is Sandy Goodman,IIDA, CHID, EDAC, LEED AP, LSSBB, and President of CRGA Design. CRGA provides comprehensive architectural, interior design and planning services utilizing an experienced in-house team of architects and interior designers specializing in healthcare design. Sandy shares in detail how the pandemic influenced the way she and her team work with their healthcare clients and partners on projects, and what lessons she has taken away from the experience. Lean in and listen to part 1 of today’s podcast with this Lean Six-Sigma Black Belt, Sandy Goodman, who generously shares what it means to maximize efficiency and eliminate waste in the healthcare environment. Learn more about Sandy Goodman and CRGA Design by visiting https://crgadesign.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Sandy Goodman, they discuss: How did CRGA experience COVID in 2020? How has the pandemic influenced the way Sandy and her team work with their healthcare clients and partners on projects? What does Sandy mean when she says that she and her team are “very innovative, pushing the envelope a little bit” on projects? Sandy is a Lean Six-Sigma black belt. What does this mean for Sandy’s projects at CRGA? How does Sandy utilize her unique expertise to maximize efficiency and eliminate waste in the healthcare environment? Sandy has said that she and her team are architects and interior designers working seamlessly together and that all CRGA’s designers are planners. How does this benefit projects? Coming up on part 2 of today’s episode, Cheryl continues her rich conversation with Sandy Goodman. Sandy generously shares what it means to put the patient in the middle, and the importance of the AAHID (The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers), what they offer, and how having Certified Healthcare Interior Designers on your teams makes a unique difference in what their team offers their healthcare partners. Part 2 of today’s episode is available now. The world is changin
Tue, May 31, 2022
On Part 2 of today’s episode, Cheryl continues her fascinating conversation with Sandy Goodman, IIDA, CHID, EDAC, LEED AP, LSSBB, and President of CRGA Design. CRGA provides comprehensive architectural, interior design and planning services utilizing an experienced in-house team of architects and interior designers specializing in healthcare design. Sandy generously shares what it means to put the patient in the middle, and the importance of the AAHID (The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers), what they offer, and how having Certified Healthcare Interior Designers on your teams makes a unique difference in what their team offers their healthcare partners. Learn more about Sandy Goodman and CRGA Design by visiting https://crgadesign.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Sandy Goodman, they discuss: What Sandy means when she says, “We really focus on putting the patient in the middle.” Sandy shares more about the AAHID, what they offer, and how having Certified Healthcare Interior Designers on your teams makes a unique difference in what their team offers their healthcare partners. Sandy’s journey that led to her career in healthcare What inspires Sandy today? What is the future of healthcare and how can interior designers and architects become more prepared? What advice does Sandy have for interior design and architecture students who are considering healthcare as their specialty, and also have some reservations about it? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . <sp
Tue, April 26, 2022
On Part 1 of today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Trisha Fong, Assoc. AIA, Senior Associate at e4h, Environments for Health Architecture . Trisha generously shines the spotlight on e4h’s 4wrd; Diversity, Equity, Inclusion initiative. What is 4wrd and why was it created? How can 4wrd help change the healthcare design community and the world for the better? This and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design on part 1 of today’s episode with Trisha Fong. Learn more about Trisha Fong and e4h architecture by visiting https://e4harchitecture.com/ In Cheryl’s conversation with Trisha Fong, they discuss: What is 4wrd , and how did it get started? How can 4wrd help change the healthcare design community and the world for the better? What are the meeting sessions that are offered through the 4wrd initiative and who else can participate in the sessions? Who are the Oneida Nation and how has e4h worked with Oneida to provide better healthcare for their communities? How can other healthcare architects, designers, students, nurses and stakeholders support DEI initiatives within their fields? Coming up on part 2 of today’s episode we look at e4h’s 4wrd initiative in action! Cheryl’s interviews Bill Repichowskyj, Partner at e4h, Environments for Health Architecture. Bill takes us on the journey of e4h’s design project for the Oneida Nation; a federally recognized tribe of Oneida people in the United States. Part 2 is available now. The world is changing quickly. The Center
Tue, April 26, 2022
On Part 2 of today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Bill Repichowskyj, AIA, Partner e4h, Environments for Health Architecture. Bill gives us a closer look at e4h’s 4wrd initiative in action by generously walking us through the firm's design project for Oneida Nation; two new outpatient clinics in The Dreamcatcher Plaza in Oneida, New York—the Oneida Nation Health Services building and the Bassett Oneida Health Center. How did Bill and his team win the project? What was unique about designing healthcare facilities for the Oneida Nation–a federally recognized tribe of Oneida people in the United States? Learn the answers to these questions and more on the changing face of healthcare design on part 2 of today’s episode with Bill Repichowskyj. Learn more about Bill Repichowskyj and e4h architecture by visiting https://e4harchitecture.com/. In Cheryl’s conversation with Bill Repichowskyj, they discuss: How did e4h win the healthcare projects at The Dreamcatcher Plaza in Oneida, New York; the Oneida Nation Health Services building and the Bassett Oneida Health Center? How was the Oneida Nation Healthcare Services project unique and how does it align with e4h’s 4wrd initiative? How was this project different from others that Bill has worked on at e4h? What was it like working with the Oneida Nation? What did Bill and his team learn from spending time with representatives at Oneida Nation prior to beginning the project? The story of Bill’s journey into healthcare. Bill’s thoughts on the importance of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in healthcare architecture and design, and where it is headed, moving forward. The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, saf
Tue, March 29, 2022
What is the “new reality” in healthcare that has arisen due to the pandemic and how has it affected the healthcare design and architecture professions? Cheryl’s special guest on part 1 of today’s episode is Barbara Dellinger, Director of Design and Research at Adventist HealthCare . Barbara sheds light on the complex topic of current furniture and fabric specification around COVID. What is the CFFA 201 Healthcare Testing for Durable Coated Fabrics (DCF) and where does a healthcare designer begin to find best practices and current, reputable information on the subject? Barbara generously answers these questions and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design on today’s episode of the Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast! Learn more about Barbara Dellinger by visiting: https://www.linkedin.com/in/barbara-dellinger-9697b613/ Learn more about Adventist Healthcare by visiting: https://www.adventisthealthcare.com/ . Read the presentation from the 2021 HCD (Healthcare Design Conference) - The More You Know: Reduce Failures by Understanding Performance Requirements for Healthcare Durable Coated Fabrics and Surface Materials: https://aahid.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/durable-coated-fabrics-ppt-2021-hcd.pdf In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Barbara Dellinger, they discuss: How has Barbara seen the patient experience change over the years? The importance of evidence-based design (EBD) as seen through the eyes of an interior designer. What makes a healing environment and what are some of Barbara’s favorite healing spaces? What is the “new reality” and how does it relate to furniture and fabric specification around COVID? What is the CFFA 201 healthcare testing for durable coated fabrics (DCF) and what does this mean for healthcare? What is the Durable Coated Fabrics Task Group and what is Barbara’s involvement with this group? Barbara discusses her work with the AAHID or The American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers . What is EDAC and Barbara’s relationship with The Center for Health Design who offer the EDAC Certification? On Part 2 of today’s episode, “What Would Barbara Do?” Lauren Banas, Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Krug , a multi award winning furniture manufacturer
Tue, March 29, 2022
On Part 2 of today’s episode, “What Would Barbara Do?” Lauren Banas, Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Krug , a multi award winning furniture manufacturer of innovative commercial and healthcare solutions, is in the host seat! Lauren continues Cheryl’s conversation with Barbara Dellinger in part 1 of today’s episode by asking her several specific questions about current furniture and fabric specification requirements. “What Would Barbara Do?” is a light hearted discussion about a very complex topic and answers questions that have been on the minds of healthcare design professionals continuously since the pandemic began in the United States in 2020. Learn more about the Chemical Fabrics and Film Association by visiting: https://www.chemicalfabricsandfilm.com/ . Learn more about Evidence Based Design and The Knowledge Repository by visiting The Center for Health Design at https://www.healthdesign.org/ . Read the presentation from the 2021 HCD (Healthcare Design Conference) - The More You Know: Reduce Failures by Understanding Performance Requirements for Healthcare Durable Coated Fabrics and Surface Materials: https://aahid.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/durable-coated-fabrics-ppt-2021-hcd.pdf In Part 2 of Lauren’s conversation with Barbara Dellinger, they discuss: Why is Barbara Dellinger Lauren’s favorite “go to person” when faced with a concern about fabrics for healthcare environments? Vinyl in the past has been abandoned by manufacturers. Is it back? Is durability more important than sustainability? What happens when fabrics puddle and wrinkle? Is there any way for designers to know which fabrics will succeed and which ones will fail? Are woven fabrics ever acceptable? Why is chair construction so important? What are the current trends – solid surface vs. laminate, wood vs. metal? What does Barbara consider to be the minimal rate rating acceptable when specifying lounge seating in healthcare environments? Who are the Chemical Fabrics and Film Association, and why are they such a great resource for designers? Krug Healthcare Solutions is a multi-Nightingale award-winning furniture manufacturer. Krug has been
Tue, February 22, 2022
What happened in 1995 when a 30 year old Clinical Oncology Nurse Specialist at the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh, Scotland gave chemotherapy to her breast cancer patient named Maggie Keswick Jencks? How did this immediate friendship lead to 24 Maggie’s centers in NHS hospitals across the UK, and three independently run international centers, 26 years later? On Part 1 of today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Dame Laura Lee, DBE, Chief Executive of Maggie's--Everyone’s Home for Cancer Care. Maggie’s is a special story shared here through Cheryl and Laura’s deeply rich and meaningful conversation. Learn how Laura and Maggie became friends, and prior to Maggie’s passing in 1995, had created architectural plans for the first Maggie’s center in the UK. How did Laura make the transition from Clinical Oncology Nurse Specialist to becoming the first employee of Maggie’s? How did she learn about architecture and design, and how did she attract the attention of famous architects, like Frank Gehry, Norman Foster, Richard Rogers, and Renzo Piano to design Maggie's centers? Sit back, relax and enjoy this deeply nourishing conversation about how two women with a mission to transform cancer care for patients, their families and caregivers attracted the attention of Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall who, in November 2008, became Maggie’s President. Learn more about Dame Laura Lee and Maggie’s by visiting: https://www.maggies.org/ . Maggie's architectural brief is given to every architect who designs a Maggie's center. Learn more here: https://www.maggies.org/about-us/publications/ In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Dame Laura Lee, they discuss: What was Laura Lee’s life like prior to meeting Maggie Keswick Jencks, her oncology patient in 1995 who would be the catalyst for Maggie’s? What happened when Laura met Maggie in 1995, when she was thirty years old, and working as a Clinical Oncology Nurse Specialist at the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh, Scotland? What was it about that connection with Maggie that inspired both Laura and Maggie to take action to create the first Maggie’s? What was Laura’s transition like from being an oncology nurse to learning about architecture and design, and getting architects to help build Maggies? What makes Maggies different from other cancer care facilities in the UK and in the world? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and
Tue, February 22, 2022
On Part 2 of today’s episode with Dame Laura Lee, DBE, Chief Executive of Maggie's –Everyone’s Home for Cancer Care, Laura shares details of the special gardens at Maggie’s, and how thoughtfully they are designed to nourish every visitor, supporting both optimistic and challenging conversations. Learn more about Maggie’s famous architects, the architect of the first Maggie’s center, and what qualities an architect must have to make her or him a perfect fit to design a Maggie’s. How did Frank Gehry become a Maggie's architect, and how did Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cornwall become Maggie’s President in 2008? Part 2 continues Cheryl's deep conversation with Dame Laura Lee as they explore the evolution of Maggie’s centers, what has changed because of the pandemic, and what the future of Maggie’s holds. Learn more about Dame Laura Lee and Maggie’s by visiting: https://www.maggies.org/ . Read Maggie’s architectural brief; given to every architect who designs a Maggie's center: https://www.maggies.org/about-us/publications/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Dame Laura Lee, they discuss: What do the gardens that play a central role in Maggie’s look like, and how do they provide nourishment to their visitors? How did Maggie’s husband, Charles Jencks get involved with Maggie’s? Who was the architect who built the first Maggie’s? What qualities does an architect have that make him/her a perfect fit to design a Maggie’s? What are some of Maggie's current challenges with the pandemic, and how has Maggie’s adapted? Listen to Laura tell the story of how In November 2008, HRH (Her Royal Highness) The Duchess of Cornwall became Maggie’s President. In 2019, Laura was awarded a Damehood for her services to people with cancer. Hear Laura tell the story and explain what exactly a Dame is. Who are some of Maggie’s strategic partners? What advice does Laura have for interior design and architecture students who are considering the field of healthcare, but might be a bit afraid of taking the plunge and specializing in it? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcom
Fri, September 17, 2021
In part 1 of today’s episode, Cheryl speaks with Phoebe Stein and David Ashen---Co-founders of the Ageless Living Collaborative -- a collective of advocates who are passionately dedicated to creating optimum outcomes for senior living. Phoebe is also the founder of Olive Presents , a public relations firm and David is the President & CEO of Dash Design-- an interior design and branding firm. The conversation was kicked off with Cheryl’s question, “What is the Ageless Living Collaborative?” David shares, “Phoebe got me into senior living and seated an idea of how we could help convey information and help people during COVID and beyond that.” Phoebe continues, “I got very excited because I love doing things in senior living and I was excited about the prospect of helping designers and ultimately helping seniors.” Learn more about the ALC, when it started and how the organization is helping designers and consumers understand more about senior living. This and so much more on part 1 of today’s episode of the podcast with Phoebe Stein and David Ashen! Learn more about the Ageless Living Collaborative by visiting: https://www.agelesslivingcollaborative.org/ Follow the ALC on Social Media: Instagram: @ageless_living_collaborativeLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ageless-living-collaborative/ In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Phoebe Stein and David Ashen they discuss: What is the Ageless Living Collaborative and when was it started? How can the ALC help the senior living design community and the hospitality design community learn more about senior living design? Who are the demographic groups in the ALC’s audience and what demographic surprised the ALC most? What kinds of webinars does the ALC offer? What are small house communities and why are they interesting to seniors? How can the ALC influence curriculum in schools and share interest about senior living design to students? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: <li style="font-weight:
Fri, September 17, 2021
In part 2 of Cheryl’s interview with Phoebe Stein and David Ashen; Co-founders of the Ageless Living Collaborative, a collective of advocates who are passionately dedicated to creating optimum outcomes for senior living, Phoebe and David share their origin stories and how their careers have informed their work with the ALC. Phoebe shares, “Coming from agency life, I have a diverse background. I’ve touched technology and automotive and so many different segments. Many of our collaborators at the ALC also have those diverse backgrounds. We can literally call on people for the technology piece. This is something special because it is beyond being a great designer. It is having that other dimension.” This and more about the Ageless Living Collaborative on part 2 of today’s episode with Phoebe Stein and David Ashen. Learn more about the Ageless Living Collaborative by visiting: https://www.agelesslivingcollaborative.org/ Follow the ALC on Social Media: Instagram: @ageless_living_collaborativeLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ageless-living-collaborative/ In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Phoebe Stein, David Ashen they discuss: What are Phoebe and David’s origin stories and how did they inform their work today with the Ageless Living Collaborative? What does Phoebe mean when she says, “Our collaborators are multi-dimensional” ? Who and what is nourishing Phoebe and David right now? How does someone know they would benefit from all the ALC has to offer? How is the ALC filling a need in our culture? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how to become a Certified Healthcare Interior Designer® by visiting the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers at: https://aahid.org/ . Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involv
Fri, August 27, 2021
On today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Laura Busalacchi, IIDA, NCIDQ, WRID, EDAC, Senior Director of Interior Services at Brookdale Senior Living. Brookdale owns and operates over 700 senior living communities and retirement communities in the United States and their base is in Brentwood, Tennessee. In part 1 of today’s episode, Cheryl asks Laura the question, “What are the challenges with current cleaning and overcleaning protocols in the senior living space, and why is this so important right now?” Laura shares, “One of the challenges is overcleaning. People often think more is better. Here’s an analogy I like to use. Think of upholstery and carpet fabric like a textile; like your clothing. Because at the root, upholstery and carpet are made out of fibers just like your clothing. So when you get a stain on your clothing, you spray it with some sort of cleaner, then you agitate it and rub it in, and then you put it in the washing machine. This process includes a rinse cycle and sometimes people like to do two rinses. Then you move it to the dryer or you let it air dry. It’s the same process for textiles and carpet. The step that is most frequently missed is the rinse. Most of the time, the rinsing to get the residue off is what is missed and when that is missed, it acts as a magnet to dirt and debris and will make your upholstery or flooring dirty faster.” This and so much more on the changing face of senior living design from Laura Busalacchi on part 1 of today’s episode. Learn more about Laura Busalacchi and Brookdale Senior Living by visiting: https://www.brookdale.com/en.html . In part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Laura Busalacchi , they discuss: There is a sense in which Senior Living was kind of Ground Zero for COVID. Laura sets the scene for how impactful COVID was in the world of senior living? Many firms have seen a project volume as a result of COVID. What about Brookdale? What have Laura and her team at Brookdale done to respond to COVID? What have been some of the lessons learned here with COVID and Brookdale? Based on what Laura has heard and seen, how prepared is Brookdale for another major viral pandemic in the next ten to 20 years? Senior Living Foresight has reported that more than half of senior living communities in this country are in immediate and dire financial peril. And yet, most are without any COVID relief funds. The rest have received a tiny amount of what they need. Hear Laura share what is happening within Brookdale and how the company is beginning to recover from this? <li style="font-weight: 400;" aria-leve
Fri, August 27, 2021
In part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation today with Laura Busalacchi, Senior Director of Interior Services at Brookdale Senior Living, Laura shares what Brookdale project made her cry and why. What moments are priceless for Laura in a project? What keeps her motivated to continue when big challenges present themselves, and how did she end up working for Brookdale? This and so much more on the changing face of senior living design from Laura Busalacchi, on part 2 of today’s episode. Learn more about Laura Busalacchi and Brookdale Senior Living by visiting: https://www.brookdale.com/en.html . In part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Laura Busalacchi , they discuss: How did Laura end up working for Brookdale? What have been some of Laura’s favorite Brookdale projects and why? What project made Laura cry and why? How does Laura get through project challenges and what keeps her motivated? What is the future of senior living in Laura’s opinion? What advice does Laura have for interior design or architecture students who are considering specializing in senior living, but are also afraid of it? Thank you for listening to today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0. If you enjoyed any part of Cheryl’s conversation today with Laura Busalacchi, Senior Director of Interior Services at Brookdale Senior Living, please help our podcast grow by spreading the good word on social media and with your online community. Stay safe and be well. For the full roster of shows, visit: http://healthcareidpodcast.com . The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how to become a Certified Healthcare Interior Designer® by visiting the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers at: https://aahid.org/ . Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environm
Fri, July 30, 2021
On Part 1 of today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Michael Lied, Principal & Director of Healthcare at GBBN. Cheryl and Michael had an honest and meaningful conversation about the challenges in healthcare today and what designers and architects in the industry can do to innovate. Cheryl asks Michael the question, “It’s been a long year and a half since COVID first came on the scene in this country. What have been some of the most profound changes in GBBN’s work of designing healthcare facilities that you have seen?” Michael shares, “One of the biggest changes has been the impact to our healthcare workforce and our care providers. Seeing that 25% of our care providers, in a recent survey, are considering leaving the profession is really tough.” This, and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design and architecture post COVID with Michael Lied, Principal & Director of Healthcare at GBBN, on today’s episode. Learn more about Michael Lied and GBBN by visiting https://www.gbbn.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Michael Lied, they discuss: It’s been a long year and a half since COVID first came on the scene in this country. What have been some of the most profound changes at GBBN that Michael has seen? Why are 25% of our care providers considering leaving the profession and what can the healthcare design community do about it? What is one of the silver linings of the pandemic? Why has healthcare been way behind at innovating from its own industry and how can this change? Why is this an exciting time in healthcare? How can the healthcare design community help manage burnout among caregivers? Is there a new product typology in healthcare? How can architecture respond to patients and their family’s arrival to the hospital and their navigation throughout the building to help reduce stress and anxiety? Learn more about GBBN’s project, Novak Center, a pediatric center in Louisville, Kentucky that brings together the entrypoint and exit, and celebrates children. What does Michael mean when he says “It is time to stop copying other industries and it is time to start pulling our resources together and understanding the uniqueness of healthcare and how environments should operate?” Why is a waiting room always the same across the country and not purpose built? Why is it not designed for the demographic of the area? And, what barr
Fri, July 30, 2021
On part 2 of today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Angela Mazzi, FAIA, FACHA, EDAC and Principal at GBBN. Cheryl asks Angela the question, “What is Salutogenesis and how does it apply to healthcare?” Angela answers, “This is a term coined by medical sociologist Aaron Antonovsky. It has latin roots--saluto meaning health and genesis meaning generating. We’re all familiar with pathogenetic or disease causing, and this sort of the opposite. What Aaron Antonovsky had noticed was that the resources people had to cope in an environment affected their outcomes. Essentially the amount of stressors in their environment and the way that they could deal with things could make a difference whether they had better healing or less beneficial healing.” Learn more about how Angela and her team at GBBN apply salutogenesis and the positive outcomes that result. This and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design on today’s episode of the podcast with Angela Mazzi. Learn more about Angela Mazzi and GBBN by visiting https://www.gbbn.com/ . RESOURCES referenced in this episode High Volume ED paper: https://healtharchitects.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/High-Volume-ED-Final.pdf HERD Journal Article on Salutogenesis : https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1937586720967347 GBBN Salutogenesis insight : https://www.gbbn.com/insights/have-you-herd-angela-mazzi-published-in-health-environments-research-design-journal/ Angela talks about the importance of a variety of milieu in this article in Healthcare Design Magazine: https://healthcaredesignmagazine.com/trends/architecture/answering-call-behavioral-healthcare-pediatric-facilities/?hilite=%27Angela%27%2C%27Mazzi%27# GBBN Milieu Insight: https://www.gbbn.com/insights/milieu-creating-restorative-environments-in-behavioral-health/ In Cheryl’s conversation with Angela Mazzi, they discuss: In November, 2020, The American College of Healthcare Architects elected Angela as their president of the Board of Regents . What does this new position mean
Thu, June 17, 2021
On today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Lynnette Tedder, Healthcare Interiors Practice Leader at Perkins+Will. Lynnette was raised by a father who worked with NASA on the Apollo 11 LUNAR landing program, and of course, Cheryl was curious! She asked Lynnette the question, “What was it like to be raised by a father who worked with NASA on the Apollo 11 LUNAR landing program and how did that inform your work in healthcare?” Lynnette shares, “Math was big in our lives. My dad was a physicist and he had a chalkboard in his office full of formulas, which I had no idea what those meant. I have always loved floor plans and puzzles and I put that math thing to work. I think it makes me a good planner.” More on this and the new face of healthcare design from Healthcare Interiors Practice Leader at Perkins+Will, Lynnette Tedder, on today’s episode of the podcast. Learn more about Lynnette Tedder and Perkins+Will by visiting https://perkinswill.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Lynnette Tedder, they discuss: What’s been the one thing that has surprised Lynnette the most in her work during COVID? Why did Lynnette choose to focus on designing healthcare environments that promote healing by altering the ambiance of a room through materiality and the careful placement of lighting and furniture? What has working from home taught Lynnette about collaborating on projects with her colleagues? Lynnette has said, “The whole healthcare practice has gone through a kind of new birth.” What does Lynnette mean by this and how is this informing her work now at Perkins+Will? What are “healthy materials” and why is this a big focus for Perkins+Will? Many healthcare designers are looking for information on healthy materials to specify under CDC guidelines. What advice does Lynnette have for them? Lynnette was raised by a father who worked with NASA on the Apollo 11 LUNAR landing program. What was that like and how did it influence her work in healthcare? What have been some of Lynnette’s favorite projects with Perkins+Will and why? What is the future of healthcare from Lynnette’s perspective? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bot
Fri, May 21, 2021
On today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Gina Chang, AIA, EDAC, Principal and Healthcare architect at CO Architects. Cheryl asks Gina the question, “What is the collaborative workplace in healthcare that we see coming out of healthcare and why is it so important right now?” Gina shares, “For so long we’ve been focused on the patients and their families which is very important. The staff is also part of the healing machine of the hospital. Human centered design focuses on humans and these humans who take care of other humans deserve to be taken care of as well. It’s about time some of the best spaces in the hospital went to the staff.” This and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design post-COVID from Gina Chang’s perspective on today’s episode of the podcast. Learn more about Gina Chang, AIA, EDAC, Principal and Healthcare Architect at CO Architects by visiting https://coarchitects.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Gina Chang, they discuss: It’s been a long year since COVID first came on the scene in this country. What’s been the one thing that has surprised Gina in her work post-COVID? It has been said about Gina, “With more than 20 years of experience, Gina understands both the complex nature of healthcare facilities, and the simple fact that these are places where people need to feel human, vulnerable, and safe.” How did Gina arrive at this empathetic understanding of the experience of the hospital space? Gina had an “aha moment” during a post-occupancy evaluation with an ICU nurse that changed her. What is the collaborative workplace in healthcare that is becoming more and more commonplace in the hospital setting? We all know there is a severe shortage of nurses and doctors who are really stressed out. How can the design of the environment help? In 2019 the Advisory Board reported that nearly 50% of physicians classify themselves as burned out. By 2030, worldwide, there needs to be double the amount of workforce there is today? What does this mean and how can healthcare architects and designers help? Why medical students currently will not have any problem with finding a collaborative workplace in their first hospital job. Gina has said, “My interest in design was nurtured in childhood through sculpture and creating objects with parts and pieces of things.” Listen to this inspiring story that continues in Gina’s life at home today. Gina shares, “Color is not just for looking good. I knew a
Fri, April 16, 2021
In Part 1 of today’s episode, Cheryl speaks with Roderic Walton, AIA, NOMA, NCARB; Principal at Moody Nolan - the nation’s largest African American architecture firm. Cheryl and Roderic dive deep into the topic of race in healthcare and architecture. Cheryl asks Roderic what it’s like to work for the nation’s largest African American architecture firm. Roderic shares, “My individual performance is often represented as that of the entire African American community by so many people that I interact with, and it can be overwhelming. There are so few black architects practicing today and what that means is that often I am the only person of color who is in a leadership role, and looks like me, in most of my professional interactions.” Learn more about what the experience is like for people of color when they enter the healthcare space and why there is a direct correlation between what communities African Americans live in and the type of healthcare they receive, and how healthcare design and architecture professionals can truly change this. Tune in to part 1 of this deeply informative, compassionate and engaging interview with Roderic Walton. Learn more about Roderic Walton,and Moody Nolan by visiting: http://moodynolan.com/ . Read Roderic Walton’s white paper entitled, “Equity in Healthcare: Healthcare in Black America, ‘Where We Are’ The Current State of Healthcare in America.” here: https://www.nomanash.com/healthequity2 and here: https://www.nomanash.com/healthequity3 In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Roderic Walton they discuss: What is it really like for Roderic (a person of color) to work for the nation’s largest African American architecture firm -- Moody Nolan -- who, among other areas of focus, address issues of disparity and uplift communities that have been disenfranchised? The story of Roderic’s early experience of racism in the field of architecture and how this was a wake-up call that race was going to be an issue. What led to Roderic’s decision to write a powerful white paper entitled, “Equity in Healthcare: Healthcare in Black America, ‘Where We Are’ The Current State of Healthcare in America?” Roderic’s white paper unpacks the complex relationship between racism, redlining, and the current asymmetry in health outcomes for Black and other minority communities. Here are two links to this read this white paper: https://www.nomanash.com/healthequity2 and <a style= "font-family: -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, 'Segoe UI', Roboto, Oxygen, Ubuntu, Cantarell, 'Open Sans', 'Helvetica Ne
Fri, April 16, 2021
In part 2 of Cheryl’s engaging interview with Roderic Walton, AIA, NOMA, NCARB, Principal at Moody Nolan, Cheryl asks Roderic the question, “When thinking about the future, how can healthcare design and architecture professionals begin to change entrenched systems that are the source of some of these race-related problems?” Roderic shares, “The solution starts with an understanding that it’s not just about individual folks solving their own problems, picking themselves up by their bootstraps and overcoming centuries of oppression. The study of history is clear, it’s instructive; we have a collective responsibility to address these types of concerns. Architects can become active participants in community engagement and outreach activities, and really position ourselves as being much more inclusive and receptive to the notion that we have elective responsibility here to address these issues of oppression. And because we are architects does not mean the problem lies outside of our industry. We are part of the solution.” This and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design on part 2 of today’s episode with Roderic Walton. Learn more about Roderic Walton,and Moody Nolan by visiting: http://moodynolan.com/ . Read Roderic Walton’s white paper entitled, “Equity in Healthcare: Healthcare in Black America, ‘Where We Are’ The Current State of Healthcare in America.” here: https://www.nomanash.com/healthequity2 and here: https://www.nomanash.com/healthequity3 In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Roderic Walton, they discuss: Roderic specializes in Building Information Modeling (BIM), and utilizing state-of-the-art 3D modeling technology in order to facilitate the production of coordinated and quality controlled deliverables. What is this exactly and how does Moody Nolan use this with their clients to project reliable models and solutions? How does Moody Nolan bring to bear a unique and irreplaceable combination of people, perspective, and process. What makes the firm unique in this way? In Roderic’s white paper entitled, “Equity in Healthcare: Healthcare in Black America, ‘Where We Are’ The Current State of Healthcare in America,” (see link in show notes) Roderic talks about solutions. When thinking about the future, Roderic shares how healthcare design and architecture professionals can begin to change entrenched systems that are the source of some of these problems. What does Roderic mean when he says that we (architects) need to be involved further downstream in the “operation of the spaces we've been involved in designing.”<
Fri, March 26, 2021
In Part 1 of today’s episode, host Cheryl Janis speaks with Sharon Woodworth, FAIA ACHA EDAC LEED, Studio Leader National Healthcare Practice at HED, about Sharon’s vast and prolific career in healthcare. Sharon is both a practicing healthcare architect shaping her practice at HED into a national firm, and an associate professor at UCSF teaching healthcare architecture to physicians and nurses who want to be a CEO in healthcare. Sharon is also a Regent for the American College of Healthcare Architects Board , and her background that led to this has evolved out of her experience as a patient throughout her childhood, and later her career as a pediatric and neonatal nurse. On today’s episode, you will hear Sharon’s personal and professional life stories that have led her to her current work in healthcare, and what the current face of healthcare architecture looks like from her vantage point. Learn more about Sharon Woodworth and HED by visiting https://www.hed.design/ In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Sharon Woodworth they discuss: Sharon has said, “I was born in a hospital and I grew up in a hospital.” What does this mean exactly and how did this experience inform Sharon’s many careers in healthcare? As a pediatric neonatal nurse for many years, Sharon has said she was gifted with the experience of “seeing behind the curtain.” What does this mean? Why did Sharon leave her nursing career and how did she find architecture? When Sharon studied art at the University of Texas, Austin, her art teacher who was also a Yale architecture professor (and the same person who taught Maya Lin the concept of The Scars Upon the Earth ) said something to Sharon that would alter the direction of her career. How did Sharon end up in healthcare architecture? When did Sharon realize that making a little change from an architect's perspective can impact thousands of lives? Sharon has worked for various prominent healthcare architecture firms before going solo and then joining up with HED. What lessons has she learned from this time in her life? Sharon is an associate professor at UCSF teaching healthcare architecture to physicians and nurses who want to be a CEO in healthcare. What is this course and how did Sharon end up teaching it? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help yo
Fri, March 26, 2021
In part 2 of today’s episode, Cheryl continues her fascinating conversation with Sharon Woodworth, FAIA ACHA EDAC LEED; Studio Leader National Healthcare Practice at HED. They dive deeper into Sharon’s vast and prolific career in healthcare. Sharon is both a practicing healthcare architect shaping her practice at HED into a national firm, and she is an associate professor at UCSF teaching healthcare architecture to physicians and nurses who want to be a CEO in healthcare. Sharon is also a Regent for the American College of Healthcare Architects Board , and her background that led to this has evolved out of her experience as a patient throughout her childhood, and later her career as a pediatric and neonatal nurse. On today’s episode, you will hear Sharon’s personal and professional life stories that have led her to her current work in healthcare, and what the current face of healthcare architecture looks like from her vantage point. This fascinating interview continues on part 2 of today’s show, now available. Learn more about Sharon Woodworth and HED by visiting https://www.hed.design/ In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Sharon Woodworth, they discuss: On Sharon’s LinkedIn profile, she writes, “ For me, architecture is its most rewarding when I give a little extra back, when I find that little something that wasn't asked for but will make the project that much better no matter how big or small. This is my why .” Learn more about what this means to Sharon and the French word she uses to describe it. What does Sharon mean when she says, “Your strength is your weakness and your weakness is your strength.” What is it like for Sharon to be the recipient of the Fellow of the American Institute of Architects or FAIA——The highest membership honor given for exceptional work and contributions to architecture and society. What are Sharon’s current projects at HED? How is HED adapting to COVID? What does Sharon think hospitals and healthcare facilities will look like in 20 to 30 years? What advice does Sharon have for architecture and design students who are interested in specializing in healthcare, but are afraid to move in this direction? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at <a h
Tue, March 16, 2021
On today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Margi Kaminski, ASID, NCIDQ, Director of Health Interiors at the prestigious CannonDesign. Cheryl asks Margi the question, “What was it like to go from being the “boss” of your small firm Quarters Designs for Living Spaces, to working for the larger more prestigious firms like those you have worked at throughout your career?” Margi’s answer to this question was deeply rich and insightful. Lean in and listen to Margi Kaminski’s story about what it was like to own and operate a small and successful healthcare and senior living design firm for many years, and then sell that practice to work for some of the largest healthcare architecture and design firms in the country. This, and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design on today’s episode. Learn more about Margi Kaminski and CannonDesign by visiting https://www.cannondesign.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Margi Kaminski, they discuss: What was it like for Margi to go from being the “boss” of her small firm to working for larger firms throughout her career? For over a decade, Margi owned and operated her small firm “Quarters Designs for Living Spaces” which focused on senior living design. What led Margi to sell the business? After selling her business, why did Margi take a four-year sabbatical, and how did she move back into the healthcare design market? What can a small business mind set bring to the larger healthcare design firms Margi has worked for? Why is senior living design a sweet spot for Margi? What are CannonDesign’s current projects and how has the firm adjusted and adapted to post COVID healthcare design? Margi shares her thoughts on the future of healthcare architecture and design. What advice does Margi have for architecture and design students who are considering moving into the field of healthcare but are also afraid of it? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers <li
Fri, February 26, 2021
In today’s episode, Cheryl speaks with Barbara Best-Santos, Principal of ForrestPerkins--a Perkins Eastman company. During their conversation, Cheryl asks Barbara the question, “How does having the kind of design expertise and experience in hospitality help you in your healthcare design projects?” To give you a little background, for 20 years Barbara Best-Santos has led the design of boutique and large-scale hotels, spas, restaurants, and resorts! Barbara’s answer was inspiring. She shares, “Hospitality can bring the focus to the guest experience and to the guest journey. We can be a little disruptive in the tried and true healthcare interiors focused arena and at the same time we get to collaborate with our partners who are really deep experts in healthcare. So the clients are getting the best of both worlds.” Learn more about the changing face of healthcare and senior living design from someone with decades of experience and understanding of how hospitality design can influence and improve the patient, family, staff and community experience. Lean more about Barbara Best-Santos and Forrest/Perkins by visiting https://forrestperkins.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Barbara Best-Santos they discuss: With over 20 years leading the design of boutique and large-scale hotels, spas, restaurants, and resorts, how has Barbara worked on breaking down the borders between hospitality and healthcare design, and hospitality and senior living design? How does Barbara’s design expertise and experience in hospitality inform her current work? What was Barbara’s role in the MarinHealth hospital project in Marin, California? Barbara’s work with a new senior living project with a Zen aesthetic in Healdsburg, California called Enso Village. This project is a collaboration between The Buddhist Center in San Francisco with the senior living group Kendal Corporation whose philosophy of design is based on Quaker ideals. Learn more about Enso Village by visiting: https://enso.kendal.org/ . What will healthcare and senior living look like in 30 years from Barbara’s perspective? Barbara’s advice to interior design students who are interested in healthcare design but are afraid to specialize in it. Thank you for listening to today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0. If you enjoyed any part of Cheryl’s conversation with Barbara Best-Santos, please help our podcast grow by spreading the good word on social media and with your online community. Stay safe and be well. For the full roster of shows, visit <a href= "http://healthcareidpodcas
Fri, February 12, 2021
In today’s episode, Cheryl speaks with Jason Haim, AIA, DBIA, LEED, AP, Executive Director and Managing Principal of Perkins Eastman’s L.A. studio. During their conversation, Cheryl asked Jason the question, “What are the Solarium Living Rooms you designed at MarinHealth in Marin, California, and how did you come up with the idea?” Jason shares, “When I was caring for my mother in the hospital, they always wanted her to get up and move around. And these corridors were a horrible experience. There wasn’t a place to go. And while at another hospital, I noticed that there were more people in the lobby that had IV poles attached to them, than those entering the building.” Learn how Jason and his team at Perkins Eastman solved this problem at MarinHealth by creating five indoor/outdoor spaces called Solarium Living Rooms. This and so much more on the changing face of healthcare architecture and design post COVID on today’s episode with Jason Haim. Learn more about Jason Haim and Perkins Eastman by visiting https://www.perkinseastman.com/ In Cheryl’s conversation with Jason Haim they discuss: Jason has said, “If you’re not innovating, you’re done.” What does this mean exactly, and how does this idea apply to Jason’s recent project at MarinHealth Medical Center Oak Pavilion in Marin, California? What is family-centered care and how did this philosophy apply to Jason’s project with Perkins Eastman at MarinHealth? Why did Jason want to make MarinHealth feel more like a hotel? How did Jason and his team at Perkins Eastman come up with the idea of Solarium Living Rooms and how were they installed at MarinHealth? What is Design-Build and how is it affecting the healthcare design industry today? When Jason was 8-years old, he and his Dad built Jason’s first tree house. What was that time like for Jason and how did it influence his career? What is the future of healthcare in Jason’s opinion? Jason answers the question, “Has COVID forever changed hospitals and the design of healthcare spaces?” The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this po
Fri, January 15, 2021
On today’s episode, Cheryl interviews Holly Harris, Architect, AIA, NCARB, LEED AP BD-C at SmithGroup. Holly, at age 28, holds the honor of being our youngest guest on the show to date, and she shares her perspective on healthcare architecture and design in today’s world. Cheryl asks Holly the question, “Many interior design and interior architect students have been known to shy away from specializing in healthcare because they see it as unsexy and boring. What do you say to that and what would you say to them?” Holly’s answer was inspiring. She quickly responded with, “If you don’t like what you’ve experienced or have seen in the world, then you could be the one to change it.” Cheryl knew right then and there, she was speaking to a next generation leader in this industry. Holly shares her perspective on the changing face of healthcare architecture and design, and so much more on today’s episode of the podcast. Learn more about Holly Harris and SmithGroup by visiting https://www.smithgroup.com/ or reach out to Holly directly via her LinkedIn page: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hollymharris/ In Cheryl’s conversation with Holly Harris, they discuss: What is it like to be a young 28 year old healthcare architect in today's world, and what differences in perspective does being young offer to the field? How “seeing behind the curtain” in a surgery suite in a hospital opened Holly’s eyes to empathy in healthcare. How did Holly end up in healthcare architecture at such a young age? The scope and some of the intricate details of SmithGroups’ Northwestern Memorial Hospital project in Chicago. What it was like to work on an 80,000 square foot renovation and addition at this NMH. What’s it like for Holly to serve as the Co-Chair of the AIA Chicago Healthcare Knowledge Community and program, executing educational and networking events for the membership? For 2021-2022, Holly will be serving as the Young Architect Regional Director (YARD) for AIA IL. Learn more about YARD and what Holly will be doing in this new role What’s it like for Holly to work on large healthcare projects with more seasoned colleagues? Is there conflict or is the process generous in sharing and learning? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line.
Fri, December 18, 2020
Jenny Hastings, Principal at Boulder Associates Architects is Cheryl’s guest today on the podcast. Cheryl asks Jenny the question, “How has the pandemic affected Lean Management Practices in your firm?” Jenny begins, “We have projects that are speeding up, some that are slowing down. Some projects that will go on hold one week and then pick up the next, and I hear this from friends at other firms.” Learn more about Lean Management philosophies and trying to work smarter and more efficiently during this time of the pandemic and moving forward on today’s episode of podcast. Learn more about Jenny Hastings and Boulder Associates Architects by visiting: https://www.boulderassociates.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Jenny Hastings, they discuss: How Jenny and Boulder Associates responded to the pandemic and what it was like during those first few months of the crisis. What are the biggest changes Boulder Associates is seeing? How has the pandemic affected BA’s Lean Management Practices? How working from home has created more connectivity among BA’s team. Why Jenny feels an intense obligation in this work to patients and their families. Who was the researcher BA brought in to the firm that Jenny has worked closely with through an entity the firm calls Examine ? What is Examine? One of BA’s cancer center projects where patients helped the firm in the design of the center, and what the firm learned. What does Jenny mean when she says, “You can design the perfect environment but if the process doesn’t support that environment, then it’s not going to work?” Can patient-centered design still be a focus with infectious disease control on the minds of so many? How did Jenny end up in healthcare design? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how to become a Certified Healthcare Interior Designer® by visiting
Tue, December 01, 2020
Alanna M. Carter, LEED AP Principal, Practice Group Lead at HGA is Cheryl’s guest today on the podcast. Cheryl asks Alanna the question, “How have you and your team responded to the pandemic and what’s happening now within your firm?” Alanna took a breath and shared, “It’s interesting as leaders. I don’t think any of us could have realized how we were going to have to navigate through that [pandemic + social unrest in Minneapolis] and then our healthcare clients who were in the middle of being these safety nets for people in the midst of it. How do they understand how to manage through that?” Lean in and listen to this heartfelt and meaningful conversation about what healthcare design innovation looks like today from the inside of one of the largest architecture and engineering firms in Minnesota. Learn more about Alanna M. Carter, LEED AP Principal, Practice Group Lead at HGA by visiting: https://hga.com/ . In Cheryl’s conversation with Alanna M. Carter, they discuss: How have Alanna and HGA responded to the pandemic and what was it like during those first few months of the crisis? How did HGA respond to the social unrest that happened in Minnesota and what it meant to HGA’s healthcare clients. What have been some of the benefits of working at home during the pandemic? What was it like among HGA’s senior living and healthcare products when the pandemic hit and how has that shifted? How is patient flow now changing in the hospital setting, and what are some of the emerging patient needs that HGA is now looking at and integrating in healthcare spaces? Are vendors and manufacturers of healthcare products changing? What is Alanna seeing? How is AI involved in this? Why are hospitals in Minneapolis and around the country seeing less violence in the hospital setting, as a result of family members and friends not allowed to visit their loved ones? What is the impact of COVID on healthcare facilities and what is HGA’s Flexible, Resilient Design? What’s happening with the healthcare cleaning staff? Are they being re-trained for the new way of cleaning? Alanna and HGA are seeing a transition in the assisted living space that answer the question, “What are the top things that need to happen to keep people safe in skilled nursing?” What is the number one thing that research is showing that keeps people safe in senior living right now? What were the pop-up hospitals that HGA designed after the onset of the pandemic? How did Alanna end
Thu, November 05, 2020
In Part 1 of today’s episode, Cheryl Janis speaks with Joshua Theodore, Vice President and Global Health Practice Leader at Leo A. Daly. During the first months of the pandemic, what other facilities, aside from hospitals, were used as surge spaces? Joshua begins, “The US Army of Corps Engineers designated 17 alternate care facilities for surge capacity, and one of those was the Javits Center in New York City. If and when they are demolished, we are going to have a lot of extra product; $700 million dollars worth, and some of that is going to end up in the bin and that is a massive amount of waste.” Get an insider’s perspective into what else was going on behind the scenes during the first several months of the pandemic, and what new innovations are coming out of Leo A Daly’s firm on part 1 of today’s episode. Learn more about Joshua Theodore and Leo A. Daly by visiting https://leoadaly.com/ . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Joshua Theodore they discuss: How did Joshua Theodore and Leo A. Daly respond to the pandemic and what was it like emotionally during those first few months of the crisis, from inside the firm? What is Leo A. Daly’s task force and at what point after the pandemic hit the United States was the task force created? What did Leo A. Daly’s morale surveys reveal and what was learned? What is the Hotel2Hospital concept when did it start, and what was the initial response? When the US Army of Corps Engineers designated 17 alternate care facilities for surge capacity, and one of those was the Javits Center in New York City. Why has so much waste been left over from this, and what can the healthcare design community learn from this moving forward? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how to become a Certified Healthcare Interior Designer® by visiting the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers at: https://aahid.org/ . Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visitin
Thu, November 05, 2020
In part 2 of Cheryl’s interview with Joshua Theodore, Vice President and Global Health Practice Leader at Leo A. Daly, Cheryl asks Joshua about Work Well ---a new project, and new technology coming out of Leo A. Daly and their industry partners, to help fight COVID-19. Joshua shares, “Work Well started out as a 2 x 4 foot stick-built wood approach to scanning people as they come onboard. People pass through an entry door and the exit door, and there is a green and red light. If you get a green light, you can continue walking through and if you get a red light, you are going to stop. The light system is tied to a temperature scanning system.” Learn more about the genesis of Work Well , its privacy implications and how the healthcare industry is getting involved. This and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design on part 2 of today’s episode. To learn more about Joshua Theodore and Leo A. Daly, visit: https://leoadaly.com/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Joshua Theodore, you will learn: What is Leo A. Daly's Work Well project, how did Turner Construction get involved, and what are the implications of this new technology for the healthcare industry? What happens when someone with COVID-19, is thermally scanned at a facility and the entrance door locks? How does someone’s iPhone or other smartphone play a role in this? Are there any privacy concerns about someone suddenly being stopped and not able to get through a door? What latest project is coming out of Leo A. Daly and how shipping containers are involved. The story of Joshua's high school mission trip down to the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico, and how working on a clinic there with a group of other people played a role in influencing him to choose a career in healthcare. What advice does Joshua have for architecture and design students listening to you today, interested in specializing in healthcare, but are afraid to move in this direction? The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare challenges and make a difference in care, safety, medical outcomes, and the bottom line. Find out more at healthdesign.org . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn mo
Fri, October 09, 2020
Mary-Jean Eastman, FAIA, MRAIC, Co-Founder & Vice-Chair of Perkins Eastman is Cheryl’s guest today on the podcast. Today, women lead the majority of Perkins-Eastman offices and studios. However, it wasn’t always that way. When Mary-Jean Eastman entered architecture school in 1966, fewer than 10 percent of her classmates were women. What was that time like for Mary-Jean and how have women in architecture evolved to the more prominent leadership role they enjoy today at the firm and beyond? Mary-Jean shares, “We began to recognize the challenges for women and it became obvious that women were dropping out of the profession because of all these challenges. However, at the same time, women were entering architecture school in larger numbers and that made a huge difference. Our firm was becoming more prominent, and we were able to attract the most talented students and among them, many wonderful women. That is when our population started to change significantly.” Learn more about the history of Perkins-Eastman, how the firm responded to the pandemic in those first few months after COVID hit New York, and what changes are now being implemented in hospitals and healthcare facilities across the United States on Part 1 of today’s episode. Learn more about Mary-Jean Eastman and Perkins-Eastman by visiting: http://www.perkinseastman.com/ . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Mary-Jean Eastman they discuss: What it was like at Perkins-Eastman during the first few months of the crisis in New York which was hit hard with a surge of COVID-19 cases, early on. What is like now for the firm to design hospitals, and how does COVID recovery play a role in this? What has Perkins-Eastman learned so far from the pandemic and the equalization of care? Today, women lead the majority of Perkins-Eastman offices and studios. However, when Mary-Jean Eastman entered architecture school in 1966, fewer than 10 percent of your classmates were women. What was that time like for Mary-Jean? Hear about how a young Mary-Jean Eastman wanted to become an architect and how, despite her parents discouragement, because at the time women just didn’t do that, she moved into the field anyway. How did Mary-Jean meet Brad Perkins and what led to their creation of Perkins-Eastman in 1981? The 1980’s were a time when women were trying to assimilate into mainstream society and what this was like for Mary-Jean and other women architects at the time. Mary-Jean has said that in her over 40-year career, her greatest opportunities with institutional buildings where the clients have often been women. Learn what these opportunities have been. <li
Fri, October 09, 2020
In Part 2 of Cheryl’s interview with Mary-Jean Eastman, Co-Founder & Vice-Chair of Perkins Eastman, Cheryl asks Mary-Jean to describe her firm’s work with Memorial Sloan Kettering. “Memorial Sloan Kettering is one of the oldest and largest cancer centers in the world,” Mary-Jean begins. “When we started working with them, the mandate was to take an institution that was very much focused on research and make it a leader in patient centered care.” Learn more about the details of this project, it’s history with the firm, and what it means to design for cancer patients, on Part 2 of Cheryl’s interview today with Mary-Jean Eastman. Learn more about Mary-Jean Eastman and Perkins-Eastman by visiting: http://www.perkinseastman.com/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Mary-Jean Eastman, they discuss: Why are complex healthcare projects important and interesting to Mary-Jean and what stories have come out of the past several decades from working on complex healthcare projects? Why has Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center been such an important client to the firm and what is its history with the firm? What is it like to design such a large facility for cancer patients and how is designing for this demographic different than designing for other types of patients? Why did Perkins Eastman decide that it was going to be an employee-owned firm and what led to that decision? A young 10-year old Mary-Jean knew that she wanted to be an architect but she kept this secret to herself and instead told the grownups that she wanted to be a teacher? What does this say about Mary-Jean’s generation of women and how has this changed? When did Mary-Jean discover that she loved to solve complex problems? What is the future of healthcare design and how will technology play a role in this? What advice does Mary-Jean have for young women in architectural school who are interested in specializing in healthcare, but are afraid of it? Thank you for listening to today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0. If you enjoyed any part of Cheryl’s conversation with Mary-Jean Eastman, please help our podcast grow by spreading the good word on social media and with your online community. Stay safe and be well. For the full roster of shows, visit http://healthcareidpodcast.com . The world is changing quickly. The Center for Health Design is committed to providing the healthcare design and senior living design industries with the latest research, best practices and innovations. The Center can help you solve today’s biggest healthcare chall
Wed, September 09, 2020
On Part 1 of today’s episode, Cheryl speaks with Lesa Lorusso, PhD, MBA, Allied AIA, ASID, RID, NCIDQ, and Healthcare Director of Research and Innovation at Gresham Smith, on the firm’s new patent-pending empathic design technology. “The Empathic Design Tool” measures emotional responses of people reacting to the built environment. Lesa shares, “We have an innovation incubator within Gresham Smith we call “Studio X.” Mike Sewell , our Active Transportation Service Line Leader created The Empathic Design tool which recently won Architect Magazine’s 14th annual R&D award.” Learn more about how the “Empathic Design Tool” can measure emotional responses of people reacting in the built environment and how this is a potential game-changer in the world of empathic healthcare design research. For more information on Lesa Lorusso and Gresham Smith, visit https://www.greshamsmith.com/ . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation today with Lesa Lorusso, they discuss: How Gresham Smith responded to the pandemic and what it was like during those first few months of the crisis? A patent-pending new research innovation tool, the “Empathic Design Tool,” coming out of Gresham Smith that measures the emotional responses of people reacting to the built environment. What new research is being used to comply with distance requirements? How will Gresham Smith address social distancing in common spaces like waiting areas and will outdoor green spaces play a bigger role in social distances on hospital campuses, for example? How are touchdown-spaces being affected within the healthcare space and how can touch can be reduced in general? How can hospitals begin to rebuild trust with patients who are now staying away from hospitals and how can the design of the hospital assist with this? The history of Gresham Smith’s dedication to research and how Lesa got connected to the firm and was hired on as its Healthcare Director of Research. In Part 2 of Cheryl’s interview with Lesa Lorruso, Healthcare Director of Research and Innovation at Gresham Smith, they discuss Lesa’s research project “Investigating the Impact of Multisensory Environments on Behavior for Veterans with Dementia.” Lesa shares, “That research was a labor of the heart. I was fortunate at the University of Florida to be a part of an AIA sponsored research consortium called, ‘Vital By Design,’ with a focus on elder research.” Learn more about the synchronicities that led to Lesa’s work on the project and what fascinating research came out of it. Part 2 of the episode is available now. --- Additional support for this podcast comes fro
Wed, September 09, 2020
In the second half of Cheryl’s conversation today with Lesa Lorusso, PhD, MBA, Allied AIA, ASID, RID, NCIDQ, and Healthcare Director of Research & Innovation at Gresham Smith, they discuss Lesa’s research project, “Investigating the Impact of Multisensory Environments on Behavior for Veterans with Dementia.” Lesa shares, “That research project was a labor of the heart. I was fortunate at the University of Florida to be a part of an AIA sponsored research consortium called, ‘Vital By Design,’ with a focus on elder research.” Learn more about the synchronicities that led to Lesa’s work on the project and what fascinating research came out of it in part 2 of today’s episode. For more information on Lesa Lorusso and Gresham Smith and Partners, visit: https://www.greshamsmith.com/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Lesa Lorusso, they discuss: What was Lesa’s dissertation and her clinical trial with the VA, working with Veterans with Dementia using multi-sensory environments like, and why was this an area of interest? What are the current statistics on dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease in older adults in the United States and why this is a critical topic right now? What’s wrong with current medications for dementia? How can we change this through the design of the built environment? What the research says about the impact of multi-sensory environments on improving health for people living with dementia. What are Lesa’s favorite projects and why? What was it like for Lesa to grow up internationally, and as part of an extended military family with her dad’s work as a rescue helicopter and C-130 pilot and her mother’s work as an Air Force nurse influence? What will hospitals look like in the year 2040? Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how to become a Certified Healthcare Interior Designer® by visiting the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers at: https://aahid.org/ . Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at https://www.nursingihd.com/ . Thank you for listening to today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0. If you enjoyed any part of Cheryl’s conversation today with Lesa Lorusso, please help our podcast grow by spreading the good word
Fri, August 14, 2020
Jennifer Aliber, Principal at Shepley Bulfinch, a national architecture firm known to challenge convention, pioneer visionary design & collaborate with clients is our guest today on the podcast. In part one of today’s episode, Jennifer shares her thoughts on how hospitals and healthcare systems can be better prepared for future pandemic outbreaks in the United States. Jennifer shares, “I’m pretty sure architects are going to be spending a lot of time over the next two years trying to think about how to protect both patients and staff from pandemics.” In this episode you will get insight into the brain of one of the oldest architecture firms continuing existence in North America, and learn what innovations are on the horizon for hospitals and healthcare systems. Learn more about Jennifer Aliber and Shepley Bulfinch by visiting https://shepleybulfinch.com/ . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Jennifer Aliber, they discuss: What Jennifer and Shepley Bulfinch were up to in the five years prior to the pandemic and what changed overnight when COVID-19 hit the United States. How can hospitals and healthcare systems be better prepared for future pandemic outbreaks in the United States? How do we design hospitals in the future, and existing hospitals so we have facilities that allow various types of patients (including those with COVID-19) to get the care they need)? What was Jennifer surprised about in the aftermath of the pandemic and how hospitals have responded? Are hospital clients and partners now more open to making changes than they were prior to pandemic. To what extent do healthcare architects have a moral obligation to educate their clients on the best safety and infectious disease prevention protocols, even if that means it might threaten their relationship with their client in some way. Why Jennifer regrets not bringing the infectious disease control issue to the forefront to her colleagues, prior to the pandemic. What does designing for an infectious world now look like from Jennifer’s seat? Why are virtual office visits on the rise? What inspired and nurtured Jennifer over the years to remain at Shepley Bulfinch? How have hospitals and healthcare facilities evolved over the years Jennifer has been at her firm? Learn about the history of Shepley Bulfinch and how it transitioned from all white men to to a firm that is woman led and women owned. How does Shepley Bulfinch challenge convention? What was unique about the firm’s Dartmouth-Hitchcock health care system and what big design innovation did they apply to the project? This program is brought to you by Porcelanosa who extend their heartfelt appreciation for your support of this podcast. Stay safe and be well. To learn more about Porcelanosa, visit <a href= "http://porcelanosa.com"
Fri, August 14, 2020
In part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Jennifer Aliber, Principal at Shepley Bulfinch, Cheryl asks Jennifer, “What specific design changes will we see in the hospital and healthcare setting?” Jennifer begins to answer this question with, “I like to think about anything I don’t like as a patient because I know if I hate it, other people will hate it. This gives us an opportunity to rethink things like standing in line.” Hear Jennifer’s complete answer to this question and so much more on the changing face of healthcare design on Part 2 of today’s episode. Learn more about Jennifer Aliber and Shepley Bulfinch by visiting https://shepleybulfinch.com/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Jennifer Aliber, you will learn: What does Jennifer enjoy about complex projects? What does Shepley Bulfinch look for in those they ask to join their team? How will Shepley Bulfinch address social distancing in common areas of the hospital or healthcare facility? Why greenspaces are vital to all of Shepley Bulfinch’s projects as respite spaces and how that is now changing to multi-use areas. How is technology playing a role in creating new best practices post-COVID. What does Jennifer mean when she says, “I’ve suggested to owners for a long time that they have to stop thinking of hospitals and healthcare and they have to think about the entire world of experience?” Is there a way healthcare architects and designers can help front line healthcare worker burnout and exhaustion? The details behind Shepley Bulfinch’s 2020 AZRE RED Awards, Winner, Healthcare Project of the Year for Banner Health, Banner-University Medical Center Tucson, New Patient Tower. The history of Shepley Bulfinch’s project at The Hale Family Clinical Building with The Boston’s Children’s Hospital. How did Jennifer land at Shepley Bulfinch? What led her to healthcare architecture? What will hospitals look like in the year 2040? This program is brought to you by Porcelanosa who extend their heartfelt appreciation for your support of this podcast. Stay safe and be well. To learn more about Porcelanosa, visit http://porcelanosa.com . Thank you to our industry partner, The Center for Health Design . To learn more about CHD’s new program MakingRoom, Connecting hotels and hospitals with urgent needs for space, please visit, https://www.healthdesign.org/makingroom . Additional support for this podcast com
Fri, July 17, 2020
Diana Spellman, President of Spellman Brady & Company, an award winning interior planning firm specializing in timeless meaningful environments in healthcare, senior living and higher education is our guest today on the podcast. In part one of today’s episode, Diana and Cheryl discuss Spellman & Brady’s initial response to the pandemic. Diana shares, “We immediately created a set of standing weekly meetings and we formed several teams that would address what we, internally, called, ‘The COVID-19 Response.’” This and more on how Spellman & Brady are making important and necessary changes in their senior living and healthcare design protocols, post COVID-19 to ensure the safety of everyone. In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Diana Spellman they discuss: Diana’s experience of being a two-time cancer survivor and how that time in her life informed her experience of what is currently happening in the world today, both personally and professionally. It’s now a new world with new protocols for the healthcare space and Spellman & Brady are currently working with senior living communities--one of the most vulnerable populations in this pandemic. Now that nearly everything has been changed by COVID, how is senior living design changing? How did Diana and your team initially respond to COVID-19 and what were some of the first things that happened? What conversations are happening right now at Spellman & Brady? The process of how Spellman & Brady went about reevaluating interior finishes to make sure they were now appropriate to use during the current climate and moving forward. What’s it like to work with senior living clients right now? This program is brought to you by Porcelanosa who extend their heartfelt appreciation for your support of this podcast. Stay safe and be well. To learn more about Porcelanosa, visit http://porcelanosa.com . Thank you to our industry partner, The Center for Health Design . To learn more about CHD’s new program MakingRoom, Connecting hotels and hospitals with urgent needs f
Fri, July 17, 2020
In part 2 of Cheryl’s interview with Diana Spellman, President of Spellman Brady & Company, their conversation moves to the firm’s design philosophy and how materials and surfaces play a key role in creating S&B’s signature, purposeful and deeply meaningful environments. Diana shares, “Twenty-eight years ago, our philosophy was, ‘How do we create adjunct staff that bridge the gaps between the owners and the architects, and the medical equipment, or the senior living items that need to be within the space?’” Listen to Diana’s answer to this question and more on the changing face of healthcare design post COVID-19 in part 2 of today’s episode. In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Diana Spellman, you will learn: How Spellman & Brady’s design philosophy has evolved over the years and how materials and surfaces play a key role in creating the firm’s signature, purposeful and deeply meaningful environments. How selection of materials are changing and what new criteria Diana and her team are now looking for? Is there a new concern for Spellman and Brady with having to possibly compromise beauty in the design of a space with new CDC guidelines? Can hospitality in the senior living community remain with new safety guidelines? What does Diana mean when she says, “Does it wear like iron and is it a timeless design?” Diana discusses the article she wrote in “Facility Care” entitled “Designing for the Senses.” Learn what happened when Diana visited her dying mother in the hospital and what the term “multisensory holistic approach to design” means. How will technology play a role in healthcare design and senior living communities? This program is brought to you by Porcelanosa who extend their heartfelt appreciation for your support of this podcast. Stay safe and be well. To learn more about Porcelanosa, visit http://porcelanosa.com . Thank you to our industry partner, The Center for Health Design . To learn more about CHD’s new program Maki
Fri, June 26, 2020
Mary Frazier, AIA, LEED AP, Green Belt and Principal at Ewing Cole is our guest today on the podcast. Mary shares the need for hospital agility and the ability to quickly retool in the face of unforeseen events. She shares, “Initially, we were focused on how quickly we could expand capacity for our hospital partners within institutions themselves by repurposing large spaces such as lobbies or recommissioning rooms that may have been converted to alternate uses over the time.” Learn why patients have now become afraid to go to the hospital with empty Emergency Departments a growing concern among hospitals. How can the healthcare design professional help hospitals begin to rebuild trust and bring their patients back? This and an in-depth look at what Ewing Cole is doing to help their hospital partners adapt and thrive in the current environment, and moving forward on Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation today with Mary Frazier. With a focus on healthcare design and planning, Mary is the Managing Principal of Ewing Cole’s New York office. She ensures all projects meet her high standards for design excellence. To that end, Mary works to recruit, train and retain future industry leaders for both EwingCole and the New York office. Mary has worked on many notable and award-winning recognized projects. She embraces a hands-on approach on all projects and feels most rewarded at the completion of projects that exceed both her client’s expectations and her professional goals. Mary has a degree in Architecture from Drexel University and Business from Pennsylvania State University. She often speaks at conferences on the impacts of design on patient and staff experiences, as well as efficiency and outcome. Learn more about Mary Frazier and Ewing Cole by visiting: https://www.ewingcole.com/ . In part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Mary Frazier, you will learn: How Ewing Cole is helping their hospital partners adapt their hospital environments to accommodate surge capacity. The importance of implementing designs that embrace flexibility. The ability to convert entire units into isolation. Why are patients now afraid to go to the hospital, how Emergency Departments are emptying, and how to help rebuild trust among hospitals and their patients. How will waiting areas and other public spaces change in the post COVID environment? How can outdoor spaces be utilized to accommodate family members who don’t feel comfortable sitting inside the hospital waiting areas? What interesting new technology helps keep social distancing and boundaries in place in the hospital environment? How will shared touchdown spa
Fri, June 26, 2020
In part 2 of Cheryl’s interview today with Mary Frazier, AIA, LEED AP, Green Belt and Principal at Ewing Cole, Mary shares new technology that is greatly assisting in the battle against COVID-19 and Hospital Acquired Infections. She shares, “There are things we are seeing that we think have a lot of promise like Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation which we have put into air handlers before and continue to do so. How can we incorporate this technology into a hospital or a clinic so that perhaps at the end of the clinic day after the room has been cleaned by the cleaning staff during a nighttime period timer, the ultraviolet lights would come on and provide that additional ability to help clean those facilities?” This and more on the changing face of health and wellness in the built environment on part 2 of Cheryl's engaging conversation with Mary Frazier. With a focus on healthcare design and planning, Mary is the Managing Principal of Ewing Cole’s New York office. She ensures all projects meet her high standards for design excellence. To that end, Mary works to recruit, train and retain future industry leaders for both EwingCole and the New York office. Mary has worked on many notable and award-winning recognized projects. She embraces a hands-on approach on all projects and feels most rewarded at the completion of projects that exceed both her client’s expectations and her professional goals. Mary has a degree in Architecture from Drexel University and Business from Pennsylvania State University. She often speaks at conferences on the impacts of design on patient and staff experiences, as well as efficiency and outcome. Learn more about Mary Frazier and Ewing Cole by visiting: https://www.ewingcole.com/ . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Mary Frazier, you will learn: What are the biggest challenges that Ewing Cole and the healthcare design community in the United States as a whole are facing now? Could this be an exciting time for designers to address things like HAI’s (Hospital Acquired Infections) which are a big problem in the United States and are responsible for so many unnecessary deaths? The technology and materials that are assisting with the battle against COVID-19 and Hospital Acquired Infections. Do hospital clients look to designers for education on the best materials for the post COVID hospital? If so, does this put added pressure on designers? How can surfaces in the healthcare setting be properly cleaned according to the manufacturer’s instructions? What materials are beautiful, safe, and support ease of cleaning? Why solid surface products are the new go-to for hospital designers.<
Fri, June 05, 2020
Rachel Gutter, President of the International WELL Building Institute, on how the IWBI is leading the global movement to transform our buildings, communities and organizations in ways that help people thrive. Rachel shares, “WELL is a certification that we offer for buildings, communities, and now through our Portfolio program for organizations. It is focused on all of the different ways those places and spaces can enhance our comfort, drive improved choices for our health and well being, and generally enhance our experience whether it's working, sleeping, playing or healing.” This and more on the changing face of health and wellness and the built environment post-COVID from the President of the IWBI on part 1 of today’s episode. The International WELL Building Institute is a public benefit corporation with a mission to improve human health and well-being through the built environment. The WELL v2 pilot is the latest version of its popular WELL Building Standard (WELL), and the WELL Community Standard pilot is a district scale rating system that sets a new global benchmark for healthy communities. WELL is focused exclusively on the ways that buildings and communities, and everything in them, can improve our comfort, drive better choices, and generally enhance, not compromise, our health and wellness. IWBI mobilizes the wellness community through management of the WELL AP credential, the pursuit of applicable research, the development of educational resources, and advocacy for policies that promote health and wellness everywhere. IWBI is a participant of the United Nations Global Compact, the world’s largest corporate citizenship initiative, and helps companies advance the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) through the use of WELL. More information on WELL can be found by visiting: https://www.wellcertified.com/ and http://placesmatter.com . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation with Rachel Gutter, you will learn: How Rachel views connection and resiliency as growing strong in this global pandemic. What is the IWBI and how did Rachel Gutter arrive there as its president in 2018? Specific ways the IWBI is leading the global movement to transform our buildings, communities and organizations in ways that help people thrive. The mobilization of a global community of wellness professionals through the IWBI’s WELL AP Credential with more than 5,000 WELL APs. What exactly is a WELL Building Standard? What is WELL v2 and why was it not voted out of pilot the day before COVID-19 struck in the US? What is WELL Portfolio and how can it benefit healthcare organizations? <li style="font-
Fri, June 05, 2020
In part 2 of Cheryl’s interview today with Rachel Gutter, President of the IWBI, they discuss the IWBI’s new Task Force---with more than 250 members---whose goal is to help reduce the health burden of COVID-19 and other respiratory infections in the built environment. Rachel shares, “There was an unprecedented opportunity and a moral obligation in this crisis and we stood up the Task Force. I am thrilled to report that we had more than 400 volunteers raise their hands to participate, and the diversity is what is so astonishing.” This and more on the changing face of health and wellness in the built environment on part 2 of today’s episode with Rachel Gutter. The International WELL Building Institute is a public benefit corporation with a mission to improve human health and well-being through the built environment. The WELL v2 pilot is the latest version of its popular WELL Building Standard (WELL), and the WELL Community Standard pilot is a district scale rating system that sets a new global benchmark for healthy communities. WELL is focused exclusively on the ways that buildings and communities, and everything in them, can improve our comfort, drive better choices, and generally enhance, not compromise, our health and wellness. IWBI mobilizes the wellness community through management of the WELL AP credential, the pursuit of applicable research, the development of educational resources, and advocacy for policies that promote health and wellness everywhere. IWBI is a participant of the United Nations Global Compact, the world’s largest corporate citizenship initiative, and helps companies advance the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) through the use of WELL. More information on WELL can be found by visiting: https://www.wellcertified.com/ and http://placesmatter.com . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation with Rachel Gutter, you will learn: What was the IWBI office environment like when COVID-19 hit? As a response to the current global pandemic, the IWBI announced on March 31st, its assembly of a Task Force---with more than 250 members---whose goal is to help reduce the health burden of COVID-19 and other respiratory infections in the built environment. What is this task force and how can it help healthcare design professionals, moving forward? Why was it important to include academics and public health leaders from other countries outside of the US in IWBI’s Task Force? What is the timeline of the Task Force and what is happening now? What is the WELL Conference? As the healthcare design community in the US begins to reassess and strategize about how to best work with their clients moving forward on infectious disease co
Fri, May 15, 2020
Part 1, Linda Lybert, Founder and Executive Director of the Healthcare Surfaces Institute shares what healthcare design professionals most need to know about pathogens post-COVID-19. “We’re in the middle of a pandemic and the education on this is very real,” Linda shares. The fact is we really have to clean our surfaces in the hospital setting in a certain way and on an ongoing basis. This is critical.” This and more about the Healthcare Surfaces Institute and the “7 Aspects of Surfaces©” developed by Linda Lybert and available to download for free here: https://www.healthcaresurfaceconsulting.com/7-aspects . For the last 20 years, Linda Lybert has been a crusader for awareness and change in the crucial area of healthcare surfaces. Working directly with healthcare facilities and manufacturers, Linda developed the “7 Aspects of Surface Selectionπ©” – the foundation of her Healthcare Surface Consulting business multi-modal solution to address all aspects of this complex problem. With a clear understanding of the diverse areas of expertise all working on the same issue separately, Linda recognized a need for more research and collaboration of all experts and founded the Healthcare Surfaces Institute in 2016. This cutting-edge collaborative nonprofit brings key stakeholders together to raise awareness about the role of surfaces in the spread of infections and to drive new solutions to mitigate the incidence of HAIs. To learn more about Linda Lybert and the Healthcare Surfaces Institute, visit: https://www.healthcaresurfacesinstitute.org/ This program is brought to you by Porcelanosa who extend their heartfelt appreciation for your support of this podcast. Stay safe and be well. To learn more about Porcelanosa, visit http://porcelanosa.com . Thank you to our industry partner, The Center for Health Design . To learn more about CHD’s new program MakingRoom, Connecting hotels and hospitals with urgent needs for space, please visit, https://www.healthdesign.org/makingroom . In Part 1 of Cheryl’s conversation today with Linda Lybert, you will learn: The 5-minute crash course on healthcare surfaces hygiene. What is the Healthcare Surfaces Institute and how was it born? Why are healthcare surfaces so complex? What Linda’s research with shadowing teams of hospital facility managers, infectious diseases doctors, nurses and environmental services professionals revealed. Why Linda believes there is no such thing as a high touch surface.<
Fri, May 15, 2020
In Part 2 of Cheryl’s fascinating conversation today with Linda Lybert--Founder and Executive Director of the Healthcare Surfaces Institute --they discuss the absence of validation requirements for surfaces that are used in the healthcare and hospital environment. Linda shares, “If you don’t have surfaces that are in the healthcare setting that can be effectively cleaned and disinfected, the way they need to be cleaned and disinfected, we won’t ever stop the spread of pathogens that cause deadly infections.” Grab a pen and paper for this episode as Linda shares critical information for understanding the complexities of healthcare surfaces you won’t want to miss! For the last 20 years, Linda Lybert has been a crusader for awareness and change in the crucial area of healthcare surfaces. Working directly with healthcare facilities and manufacturers, Linda developed the “7 Aspects of Surface Selection©” – the foundation of her Healthcare Surface Consulting business multi-modal solution to address all aspects of this complex problem. The “7 Aspects of Surface Selection©” is available for free and can be downloaded here: https://www.healthcaresurfaceconsulting.com/7-aspects . With a clear understanding of the diverse areas of expertise all working on the same issue separately, Linda recognized a need for more research and collaboration of all experts and founded the Healthcare Surfaces Institute in 2016. This cutting-edge collaborative nonprofit brings key stakeholders together to raise awareness about the role of surfaces in the spread of infections and to drive new solutions to mitigate the incidence of HAIs. To learn more about Linda Lybert and the Healthcare Surfaces Institute, visit: https://www.healthcaresurfacesinstitute.org/ This program is brought to you by Porcelanosa who extend their heartfelt appreciation for your support of this podcast. Stay safe and be well. To learn more about Porcelanosa, visit http://porcelanosa.com . Thank you to our industry partner, The Center for Health Design . To learn more about CHD’s new program MakingRoom, Connecting hotels and hospitals with urgent needs for space, please visit, https://www.healthdesign.org/makingroom . In Part 2 of Cheryl’s conversation today with Linda Lybert, you will learn: Why is there an absence of validation requirements for surfaces that are used in the hospital healthcare setting and what does this mean for hospitals post COVID-19? What healthcare hygiene guidelines must be implemented in hospitals and why is surface testing so critical? Where do we start? <li style="font-weight: 400
Fri, April 24, 2020
Paul Scialla, Founder and CEO at Delos is our guest today on the podcast. By placing health and wellness at the center of design, construction, technology and programming decisions, Delos is transforming our indoor environments into spaces that actively contribute to human health and well-being. Paul shares how the current crisis is moving beyond political boundaries. “At the end of the day,” Paul shares, “The broader notion of wellness real estate--if we can use our buildings, our homes, our offices, our schools, our hotels, and our senior and assisted living facilities as a way to, constantly and passively, deliver preventative medical intentions through four walls and a roof, there is not one political mind in the world that will have a problem with that.” This and Delos’s new Facilities Improvement Program and how it can help our most vulnerable population in this pandemic---our older adults in senior living communities and facilities---on today’s episode of the Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast. After 18 years on Wall Street, including 10 at Goldman Sachs as a Partner, Paul Scialla’s interest in sustainability and altruistic capitalism led him to found Delos, which is merging the world’s largest asset class – real estate – with the world’s fastest growing industry – wellness. Since the company’s inception, Paul has become a leading voice in the sustainability movement, serving as a keynote speaker at prominent green building, real estate, and technology forums and conferences around the world. Paul is also the Founder of the International WELL Building Institute (IWBI), which administers the WELL Building Standard® globally to improve human health and wellbeing through the built environment, a member of the Board of Directors for the Chopra Foundation, and a founding board member of the JUST Capital Foundation. Paul graduated from New York University with a degree in finance, and he currently resides in New York City. Learn more about Delos by visiting https://delos.com/ . Here’s what you’ll learn from Cheryl’s conversation today with Paul Scialla: Who is Delos and what is a Well Building as interpreted by Delos? What are the components of a Well Building and why is this important during this pandemic? What is Delos’s new Facilities Improvement Program or FIP and how can it help our most vulnerable population in this pandemic--our older adults in senior living communities and facilities? What is Delos’s Stay Well program and how can the healthcare design community learn from it moving forward? Is there a political divide in the USA when it comes to wellness in the built environment and the current crisis? What is the future of healthcare and wellness and will hotels and wellness come together in the future? Advice for the younger generation of healthcare design and arch
Fri, April 10, 2020
Sara Marberry, EDAC, Healthcare Design Expert, Marketing Consultant, and writer on the short-and long-term effects of the current crisis on the healthcare design industry. Sara shares, “A halt on projects in the short term is not necessarily a bad thing. I think this will bring more renovation projects to make them safer to attract new residents in senior care facilities, for example.” This and how Sara’s career path changed at age 25 when she met Wayne Ruga at the San Francisco Furniture Mart on today's episode of the Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 podcast! Sara Marberry has been a healthcare design expert, writer, speaker, and marketing consultant for the past 30 years. Her industry involvement is wide and deep, including board positions with The Center for Health Design and the Symposium on Healthcare Design . In 1993, Sara and her colleagues formed the nonprofit Center for Health Design , which has been instrumental in advancing the idea that the design of the physical environment affects patient outcomes. Sara has written 4 books on healthcare design including: Power of Color Innovations in Healthcare Design Healthcare Design Improving Healthcare With Better Building Design Aside from her client work with Sara Marberry LLC , Sara has worked with organizations on the front lines of healthcare, like the Joint Commission and Healing Healthcare Systems . She has done website projects with the Facility Guidelines Institute and the American Academy of Healthcare Designers . Sara regularly blogs on current events and topics related to healt
Sat, February 29, 2020
In part of today’s episode Cheryl speaks with Rebecca Donner, IIDA, NCIDQ, Founder and Principal of Inner Design Studio. They discuss the rise of a new and unique challenge in the design community, stemming from HGTV’s popular shows like Fixer Uppers. As Rebecca shares, “The University’s drop-out rates have increased in the design community in the United States at an alarming rate. Interior design students are leaving their design programs around their second year, stating this is not what design looks like on television.” This and more on the changing face of healthcare design from this passionate 30-year healthcare design veteran. ‘Show-Me State’ native Rebecca Donner made her way to Nashville to earn an interior design degree at O’More College of Design . After graduating and completing challenging internship work, she found her calling in commercial healthcare interior design work. In 1993 this led her to found an interior design firm that specializes in health care design. Inner Design Studio began with one client and one employee. Today the 12 person firm handles numerous projects a year. Nashville’s leading healthcare interior design firm, Inner Design Studio is a strong team of experienced designers who have completed more than 891 medical facilities throughout the country. Rebecca has published articles in Healthcare Design Magazine, Medical Construction & Design Magazine, Floor Focus Magazine and Health Facilities Management Magazine. In 2018, Rebecca was the recipient of the second annual International Interior Design Association (IIDA) Tennessee Chapter Legend Award. Learn more about Rebecca Donner and Inner Design Studio by visiting http://innerdesignstudio.com . Learn more about Women In Healthcare by visiting: http://womeninhealthcare.org . In part one of Cheryl’s conversation today with Rebecca Donner, you will learn: Why have HGTV’s popular shows like Fixer Uppers created a new and unique challenge in the design community? Why interior design students in the United States are dropping out of school at an alarming rate, and what to do about it. What is the ACE high school mentor program? Rebecca’s advice to interior design students who want to specialize in healthcare, but are afraid to do so. How can design create positive distractions for kids in distress? What are the treehouses at Lutheran’s Hospital in Fort Wayne , Indiana and how do they create an exceptional positive distraction for kids? How did Rebecca and her team come up with the idea? How have materials played a key role in creating comfortable and nurturing healthcare environments and how has this changed over the years? How Rebeca and her team stay positive when working on oftentime
Sat, February 29, 2020
In the second half of Cheryl’s conversation with Rebecca Donner, they discuss The Women in Healthcare Initiative which began in Washington DC about two years ago, to elevate the professional development of women in healthcare -- both the providers and the businesses that support the providers. “The networking and the mentorship, and simply the acceleration of careers provided by the membership has been outstanding,” shares Rebecca. “ We were stunned when we found out there wasn’t a membership chapter in Nashville, so we started one.” This and more on the changing face of healthcare design from this passionate 30-year healthcare design veteran. ‘Show-Me State’ native Rebecca Donner made her way to Nashville to earn an interior design degree at O’More College of Design . After graduating and completing challenging internship work, she found her calling in commercial healthcare interior design work. In 1993 this led her to found an interior design firm that specializes in health care design. Inner Design Studio began with one client and one employee. Today the 12 person firm handles numerous projects a year. Nashville’s leading healthcare interior design firm, Inner Design Studio is a strong team of experienced designers who have completed more than 891 medical facilities throughout the country. Rebecca has published articles in Healthcare Design Magazine, Medical Construction & Design Magazine, Floor Focus Magazine and Health Facilities Management Magazine . In 2018, Rebecca was the recipient of the second annual International Interior Design Association (IIDA) Tennessee Chapter Legend Award. Learn more about Rebecca Donner and Inner Design Studio by visiting http://innerdesignstudio.com . Learn more about Women In Healthcare by visiting: http://womeninhealthcare.org . In part two of Cheryl’s conversation today with Rebecca Donner, you will learn: What is the Women in Healthcare Initiative and how can other women in the healthcare industry participate? With 900 projects in 26 years, what is Rebecca’s favorite project and why? Why construction in California takes so much longer than in other states. The pushback in the early days of hospitality-influenced hospital design. How did Rebecca find her way into healthcare design work? The benefits of having a smaller team. How hospitals can raise HCAPS based on the design of the environment. Why janitorial services are at the top of the list of what needs to change in healthcare. <li style="fon
Sat, February 08, 2020
Victoria Navarro, MBA, HCM and Regional Director in the Planning, Design and Construction Department at Advocate Aurora Health on failure and setbacks. “ A lot of things I’ve learned from failures or setbacks has really shaped my thinking to persevere and continue to find ways to problem solve,” Victoria shares . “I love the saying, ‘In order to blaze a trail, you mustn’t be afraid to fail.’” This and what the hospital space will look like in the year 2020 from Victoria Navaro’s perspective on today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 - The Lightning Round. Victoria started her professional career in the planning, design and construction of health care facilities. Over the past 20 years, she has served as senior healthcare planner for national architectural firms and has delivered over $1 billion in forward focused capital projects, leading teams to analyze and solve complex challenges. Victoria is the Founder and Co-Chairperson of the Lean Construction Institute Milwaukee Community of Practice, an Editorial Advisory Board Member for Healthcare Design Magazine and a 2019 recipient of the MVP Leader Award for Advocate Aurora Health. She was awarded the Bob Krier Award - given by both the Chicago and Milwaukee Lean Construction Institute Community of Practice, for leadership in advancing the industry using Lean Design and Construction. Advocate Aurora is the 9th largest integrated not-for-profit health system in the United States, serving communities in both Illinois and Wisconsin. To learn more about Victoria Navarro and Advocate Aurora Health, visit: https://www.advocateaurorahealth.org/ This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning, eco-conscious Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Porcelanosa’s anti-bacterial, solid surface product K-LIFE (think countertops, backsplashes, no-splash sinks, and more) uses a technology called photocatalysis. Photocatalyis purifies the air, self-cleans, expels harmful bacteria, and eliminates chemical products when it is exposed to light! I know; amazing, right? K-LIFE can seriously put a dent in Hospital Acquired Infections and it’s a gorgeous product! It can be shaped into anything you want, printed on, and lit up. Imagine the design possibilities for your hospital project! Learn more about Porcelanosa’s K-LIFE and how to order samples of this BPA-FREE Certified and Reach Compliant product by visiting: https://www.porcelanosa-usa.com/klife/ That’s porcelanosa-usa.com/klife Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The Center For Health Design The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how the Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: <a href="http://hea
Fri, January 24, 2020
Monika Smith, Design Director at Apex Design Build, on what no one is talking about in a healthcare project that they should be talking about. Monika shares, “ When many of the doctors we serve in private practice decide to build their own practices, they often don’t ask themselves the question, ‘How will my practice stand out in the marketplace?’” That and more on what’s right with healthcare design, what the industry will look like in the year 2040, and one story about what happened when a father/daughter physician team moved offices. Learn more about Monika Smith and Apex Design Build by visiting https://apexdesignbuild.net . This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning, eco-conscious Porcelanosa -- a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Here's something I bet you didn't know about Porcelanosa's wood-look ceramic tile: It looks astonishingly real! Here’s why: In order to get as close to a hard wood look and feel as possible, they digitally analyzed wood from 1500 trees from 26 different countries to replicate the grain, the knots, and the growth rings in the plank sawn, cross sawn, and quarter sawn milling of the logs. When you combine a wood look with a ceramic body, you get a material that is fire-resistant, extremely hard-wearing, fade-proof, damp-proof, easy to clean, AND… eco-friendly. Because Porcelanosa's PAR-KER Forest Collection starts with 95% recycled material, its production produces 40% less Co2. Learn more by visiting https://www.porcelanosa-usa.com/ . Type into their product search feature the word “PARKER" and hit enter. Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: • The Center For Health Design • The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how The Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at https://www.nursingihd.com/ . Featured Product: Porcelanosa has always kept the environment in mind when manufacturing and developing new products – including reducing any emissions and waste created during manufacturing, and introducing the use of recycled materials within the production chain. The firm’s latest eco-friendly project is the FOREST series. The series consists of four new PAR-KER® wood porcelain tiles, designed to give a solution to the growing demand in the healthcare industry. The FOREST collection features a few noteworthy
Fri, January 03, 2020
Lisa M. Cini, Tech-Thought Leader, Best-selling author, National Designer for Senior Living and Aging in Place Environments, and Principal at Mosaic Design Studio on her purchase of the storied Columbus, Ohio Woodland Manor Mansion . Lisa (and her team) are in the process of transforming the mansion into a fully functional living experience to highlight the newest innovations in technology for senior and multi-generational living. She shares, “I was driving past this mansion one day, and I had always seen it on my drive home for about 20 years, and there was a for sale sign outside. And I thought, I’m supposed to buy this.” This and more on the marriage of high-tech and healthcare design for multi-generational and senior living. Learn more about Lisa M. Cini by visiting: http://mosaicdesignstudio.com and https://lisamcini.com . Lisa’s latest book entitled, BOOM - The Baby Boomer’s Guide to Leveraging Technology So That You Can Preserve Your Independent Lifestyle and Thrive is an #1 Amazon Bestseller. Lisa is also the author of Hive - “The Simple Guide to Multigenerational Living” and “The Future is Here: Senior Living Reimagined.” Lisa M. Cini has been published worldwide and she is a monthly contributor to national senior living websites and magazines. Lisa is considered a visionary in her field, and she is credited with developing repeatable, sustainable and durable designs that save her clients time and money. Lisa has received a multitude of awards and honors for her design skills and business and leadership acumen, and has shared her senior living design expertise on the program “Today in America with Terry Bradshaw.” This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning, eco-conscious Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Porcelanosa’s anti-bacterial, solid surface product K-LIFE (think countertops, backsplashes, sinks, and more) uses a technology called photocatalysis. P purifies the air, self-cleans, expels harmful bacteria, and eliminate chemical products when it is exposed to light. <span style="font-weight
Fri, December 20, 2019
Melinda P. Avila-Torio, NCIDQ, CHID, RID, CASP, LEED AP, and Senior Associate and Project Manager at THW Design on the need for private family rooms at senior living facilities. When a male executive at an assisted living facility was quietly in conversation with a resident, the resident suddenly and peacefully died. In order not to not alarm the other residents, the executive continued to softly speak to the woman, while holding her hand. According to Melinda, these types of experiences are on the rise and have created a need for dedicated and private family rooms. This and more on Environments for Aging design trends on today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 - The Lightning Round. Learn more about Melinda P. Avila-Torio and THW Design by visiting http://thw.com . * Please note this correction: The Ring Video, mentioned in the episode by Melinda, said to be brought into the 2009 Idea House was incorrect. The Digital Door View by FirstView Security is the correct name of this product. Home Technology Systems, Inc. was the vendor who brought The Digital Door View to the Idea House. We apologize for this error. Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 is brought to you by the award-winning, eco-conscious Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. When thinking about your next hospital or healthcare project, please consider Noken, Porcelanosa's bathroom faucets. Here’s why. NOKEN’s research and development department invented a wonderful new feature called The Cold ON System. This means when Noken’s faucets are turned on, they start with cold water and only mix in hot water if and when the user intentionally chooses it. This system eliminates the risk of burning and the unnecessary use of hot water. Energy use and CO2 emissions from heaters and boilers are also reduced. The best news? Noken’s Cold-On faucets save 100 bathrooms 5000 gallons of hot water per year! Imagine how much savings in water for hospitals and healthcare facilities, and how many hugs you’ll get from your clients. Learn more by visiting http://noken.com . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The Center For Health Design The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design and The American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers Learn more
Thu, December 05, 2019
Rosalyn Cama, FASID, NCIDQ, EDAC, President and Principal Interior Designer at CAMA Inc. on The Time Between - traditionally known as “waiting time” in the hospital and healthcare setting. Rosalyn shares, “The space between care delivery can be so much longer. We decided to map these experiences and called it The Time Between. We wanted to know what people were thinking, feeling and seeking for distraction, and how the built environment could possibly improve those conditions. It is during these times of waiting that pain and confusion set in not just for patients, but for family members, as well.” Learn more about The Time Betwee n, and how it is during this time that patient satisfaction shifts as the patient’s perception of care changes. This, and how CAMA Inc. is partnering with artisans and manufacturers to harness the healing power of touch and promote physical contact between patients, loved ones, and caregivers. Rosalyn Cama, has been the President & Principal of CAMA Inc. for 36 years. CAMA is a health design lab, studio, and collection that has spearheaded the evidence-based design movement. You and your team use research, team leadership, consulting, prototyping, and interior design to create environments and experiences that empower wellbeing. Rosalyn, along with partner artisans and manufacturers, started The CAMA Collection, in 2015. The Collection addresses the gap in the kit-of-parts needed to fully develop innovative interior environments that impact human behavior. CAMA Collection won Best of Year from Interior Design Magazine in 2015 and the Nightingale Award's Best of Competition in 2016. Rosalyn was also a 2019 ASID Design Innovation Award Winner and named one of 2019’s Women In Design---an honor awarded by Healthcare Design Magazine for her and her teams’ creativity, thought leadership, and lasting works in the field of healthcare design. Learn more about Rosalyn Cama and CAMA Inc. by visiting https://www.camainc.com/ . Learn more about The Cama Collection by visiting: http://www.camacollection.com/ . This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting <a href="ab
Mon, November 11, 2019
Dr. Diana Anderson, a licensed and board-certified healthcare architect and licensed Internist, on the growing role of the physician in healthcare design, and why she invented the term “Dochitect.” She describes, “Even when I’m on rounds now in medicine, I’m constantly looking up at the lighting, looking at the ceiling tiles, and counting the square footage of a room, or really considering how the design is impacting what I’m doing.” This and more on how healthcare design and architecture can penetrate the more superficial layers of design to impact end users more deeply by understanding the physician’s role in the medical space. Dr. Anderson has worked on hospital design projects within the United States, Canada and Australia, specializing in medical planning of inpatient units, specifically intensive care unit environments. As a "dochitect", Dr. Anderson combines educational and professional experience in both medicine and architecture, in order to truly understand what is involved in medical planning and working within the healthcare environment. Learn more about Diana Anderson and her work by visiting http://www.dochitect.com/ . Learn more about Clinicians for Design by visiting: https://www.cliniciansfordesign.com/ This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting http://porcelanosa.com . --- Let’s play a game. I want you to count up every time you’ve had furniture delivered on a hospital or healthcare project, and the product fell short of your expectations. Do that on one hand. Now, on the other hand, I want you to count up how many times you’ve had to compromise the integrity of a project because you’ve been limited by furniture options and budget. Now, that was kind of a trick question because I know all of you need more than two hands to count up these situations. Here’s a solution: Stance Healthcare. Stance specializes in furniture for the hospital and healthcare setting, and they pride themselves on working with designers who need to modify furniture for a variety of end users. Here’s a great example. At the request of a designer, Stance modified their popular Legend chair to create a closed arm panel and they made the seat depth adjustable for different sized residents in an assisted living facility. How freaking cool is that? Start exploring now at: http://stancehealthcare.com/ . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The Center For Health Design The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design and Learn more about how the Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: <a href="http://healthde
Mon, November 11, 2019
In the second half of Cheryl’s conversation with Dr. Diana Anderson, they discuss this idea of what is the moral imperative of the architect to communicate research to clients and discuss potential benefits and harms of design. “Architects are sometimes torn between thinking about the state of healthcare outside of their individual project to a client,” Diana shares. “And I think we often have reservations about measuring design quality.” This and more on the changing face of the healthcare design from a “dochitect’s” perspective. Dr. Anderson has worked on hospital design projects within the United States, Canada and Australia, specializing in medical planning of inpatient units, specifically intensive care unit environments. As a "dochitect", Dr. Anderson combines educational and professional experience in both medicine and architecture, in order to truly understand what is involved in medical planning and working within the healthcare environment. Learn more about Diana Anderson and her work by visiting http://www.dochitect.com/ . Learn more about Clinicians for Design by visiting: https://www.cliniciansfordesign.com/ . Download the Hazards of Hospitalization of the Elderly medical paper by Dr. Mortan Creditor from the Annals of Internal Medicine here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8417639 . This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting http://porcelanosa.com . ----- We’ve all seen some variation of this: Somebody’s kid sibling gets into their parent’s closet and emerges, clothed in a dress or trousers that are 3 feet too long, trailing on the floor behind them. It’s cute as all get-out, right? It’s the end of 2019, and as healthcare thinking and design moves away from a one-size-fits-all, institutional mindset, towards a more personalized, individualized care model, you are looking for ways to move away from one-size-fits-all thinking in your hospital, healthcare & senior living projects. Here’s a great example from one of our podcast guests, Sara Parsons with Gallun Snow Associates. Sara shares, “Different patient populations need different art and graphics. A still life of fruit will not comfort a surgery patient checking in on an empty stomach and a mountain stream may be uncomfortable for an ultrasound patient arriving as instructed with a full bladder.” Art Addiction understands your unique challenges when it comes to selecting the very best artwork for your project. They offer a library of over 15,000 unique, gorgeous images, an in-house studio that can produce everything from small-scale yet durable and cleanable prints to mural-sized acrylic wall insta
Mon, October 28, 2019
Suzanne Fawley - Behavioral Health Consultant at Stance Healthcare on her early childhood experiences in the ED where her mother was an RN and the director of the department. “There were times when the school bus let me off at the hospital,” explains Suzanne. Most of the time I watched people, and noticed how they processed anger or hurt and pain, and illness.” This and more on the changing face of behavioral health design on today’s episode. Learn more about Stance healthcare and their line of furniture designed for the behavioral health setting at: http://www.stancehealthcare.com This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting https://www.porcelanosa.com/ . ---- Let’s play a game. I want you to count up every time you’ve had furniture delivered on a hospital or healthcare project, and the product fell short of your expectations. Do that on one hand. Now, on the other hand, I want you to count up how many times you’ve had to compromise the integrity of a project because you’ve been limited by furniture options and budget. Now, that was kind of a trick question because I know all of you need more than two hands to count up these situations. Here’s a solution: Stance Healthcare. Stance specializes in furniture for the hospital and healthcare setting, and they pride themselves on working with designers who need to modify furniture for a variety of end users. Here’s a great example. At the request of a designer, Stance modified their popular Legend chair to create a closed arm panel and they made the seat depth adjustable for different sized residents in an assisted living facility. How freaking cool is that? Start exploring now at: http://stancehealthcare.com/ . In part one of Cheryl’s conversation today with Suzanne Fawley, you will learn: How the sudden disappearance of Suzanne’s father at age 8 and his sudden return several years later at age 25, impacted Suzanne’s career path. What Suzanne learned from her several years long childhood experience of spending time in the ED after school where her mom was a nurse at the hospital. What Suzanne learned about furniture and how materials performed from working for some of the best furniture manufacturing professionals in the industry. What Suzanne’s diverse and rich career path, including her post college internship at Hayden Design Associate and her college summer work at Burlington Furniture Industries, taught her about behavioral health design. The difference between behavioral health and mental health, and what The Center for Health Design is
Mon, October 28, 2019
In the second half of Cheryl’s conversation with Suzanne Fawley, Suzanne breaks down her first furniture design for Stance Healthcare, which won the Resilia/HD Nightingale Award. Suzanne shares, “Resilia offers the same cylinder shape table that is often seen in the industry, however, the surround is made out of forbo marmoleum which is an asbestos free flooring. You can’t pick at it and pull it apart or make it into a weapon. So it is very safe.” This and more on the intricacies of furniture built specifically for the behavioral health setting, and offered by Stance Healthcare. Learn more about Suzanne Fawley and Stance Healthcare by visiting: http://www.stancehealthcare.com This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting https://www.porcelanosa.com/ . --- Let’s play a game. I want you to count up every time you’ve had furniture delivered on a hospital or healthcare project, and the product fell short of your expectations. Do that on one hand. Now, on the other hand, I want you to count up how many times you’ve had to compromise the integrity of a project because you’ve been limited by furniture options and budget. Now, that was kind of a trick question because I know all of you need more than two hands to count up these situations. Here’s a solution: Stance Healthcare. Stance specializes in furniture for the hospital and healthcare setting, and they pride themselves on working with designers who need to modify furniture for a variety of end users. Here’s a great example. At the request of a designer, Stance modified their popular Legend chair to create a closed arm panel and they made the seat depth adjustable for different sized residents in an assisted living facility. How freaking cool is that? Start exploring now at: http://stancehealthcare.com/ . In part two of Cheryl’s conversation today with Suzanne Fawley, you will learn: The definition of Experiential Design and how without it, critical aspects of a patient-centered design are oftentimes overlooked. Suzanne’s first furniture design for Stance Healthcare won the Resilia/HD Nightingale Award. Learn what makes this product line unique to behavioral health design requirements. The details about Suzanne’s second furniture line--Frontier--for Stance Healthcare. Why in mental health and behavioral health design, you don’t have to have augmented, enlarged furniture everywhere. Research has shown that lower beds in patient rooms can be more dangerous. Frontier’s fluid management system is highly specializ
Mon, September 30, 2019
Tama Duffy Day, Health & Wellness Leader at Gensler Architecture on the power of engaging the design professional to improve health and wellness, globally. Tama shares, “Whether I’m in Taiwan or China or Ireland or Pakistan or even domestically, talking with students in Fayetteville at the University of Arkansas or Moscow at the University of Idaho, or Chicago or The New York School of Interior Design, we all truly believe that the power of design does make a difference and it can enrich communities.” This and more on the changing face of healthcare design and its impact from one of the largest architecture firms in the world. Tama Duffy Day is a global author, lecturer, and speaker. She and her team at Gensler have received more than 50 awards and honors for their work, and for three consecutive years Tama was named one of the “Most Influential People in Healthcare Design” by Healthcare Design magazine. Tama is one of the few design professionals inducted as a fellow into the American College of Healthcare Executives. Learn more about Tama Duffy Day and Gensler Architecture by visiting https://www.gensler.com/ . Send your questions to Tama here: Tama_DuffyDay@gensler.com . This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Here’s something I bet you didn’t know about Porcelanosa: After 46 years, Porcelanosa is still a family-owned business, and with more than 970 stores in 150 countries, they are champions of a healthier planet. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting https://www.porcelanosa.com/ . Let’s play a game. I want you to count up every time you’ve had furniture delivered on a hospital or healthcare project, and the product fell short of your expectations. Do that on one hand. Now, on the other hand, I want you to count up how many times you’ve had to compromise the integrity of a project because you’ve been limited by furniture options and budget. Now, that was kind of a trick question because I know all of you need more than two hands to count up these situations. Here’s a solution: Stance Healthcare. Stance specializes in furniture for the hospital and healthcare setting, and they pride themselves on working with designers who need to modify furniture for a variety of end users. Here’s a great example. At the request of a designer, Stance modified their popular Legend chair to create a closed arm panel and they made the seat depth adjustable for different sized residents in an assisted living facility. How freaking cool is that? Start exploring now at: http://stancehealthcare.com/ . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The Center For Health Design <li style="font-weight: 40
Mon, September 30, 2019
In the second half of Cheryl’s conversation today with Tama Duffy Day, Health & Wellness Leader at Gensler Architecture, Tama offers insight into her two-year position as podcast host on Gensler’s popular podcast, Design Exchange. Tama’s gives her advice to other design firms about whether or not to start their own podcast. She shares, “Being a podcast host gives you an opportunity to allow someone else’s voice to be heard.” Tama shares her insight on this and more on the changing face of healthcare design and its potential to impact health and wellness, globally. Tama Duffy Day is a global author, lecturer, and speaker. She and her team at Gensler have received more than 50 awards and honors for their work, and for three consecutive years Tama was named one of the “Most Influential People in Healthcare Design” by Healthcare Design magazine. Tama is one of the few design professionals inducted as a fellow into the American College of Healthcare Executives . Learn more about Tama Duffy Day and Gensler Architecture by visiting https://www.gensler.com/ . Send your questions to Tama an email to: Tama_DuffyDay@gensler.com . This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting https://www.porcelanosa.com/ . ---- We’ve all seen some variation of this: Somebody’s kid sibling gets into their parent’s closet and emerges, clothed in a dress or trousers that are 3 feet too long, trailing on the floor behind them. It’s cute as all get-out, right? It’s the end of 2019, and as healthcare thinking and design moves away from a one-size-fits-all, institutional mindset, towards a more personalized, individualized care model, you are looking for ways to move away from one-size-fits-all thinking in your hospital, healthcare & senior living projects. Here’s a great example from one of our podcast guests, Sara Parsons with Gallun Snow Associates. Sara shares, “Different patient populations need different art and graphics. A still life of fruit will not comfort a surgery patient checking in on an empty stomach and a mountain stream may be uncomfortable for an ultrasound patient arriving as instructed with a full bladder.” Art Addiction understands your unique challenges when it comes to selecting the very best artwork for your project. They offer a library of over 15,000 unique, gorgeous images, an in-house studio that can produce everything from small-scale yet durable and cleanable prints to mural-sized acrylic wall installations and their design support team is superb. Start exploring now by visiting https://www.artaddictioninc.com/ . Additional support for this podcast comes from ou
Fri, September 06, 2019
Whitney Hendrickson, former Pediatric RN and current Healthcare Interior Designer at Perkins+Will shares her thoughts on what hospitals might look like in the year 2040. “I’m sure there will be smart footwalls, maybe an Alexa-style nurse call system, a way to take peoples’ weights through the floor and their blood pressure through the bed they are sitting in,” says Whitney. Tune into this and more on what it’s like to be a healthcare interior designer from the perspective of a former pediatric nurse on today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 - The Lightning Round. This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning, eco-conscious Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Porcelanosa’s anti-bacterial, solid surface product K-LIFE (think countertops, backsplashes, sinks, and more) uses a technology called photocatalysis that purifies the air, self-cleans, expels harmful bacteria, and eliminate chemical products. K-LIFE can help reduce Hospital Acquired Infections and it’s a gorgeous product. It can be shaped into anything you want, printed on, and lit up. Imagine the design possibilities for a hospital room! Learn more about Porcelanosa’s K-LIFE and how to order samples of this BPA-FREE Certified and Reach Compliant product by visiting: https://www.porcelanosa-usa.com/klife/ Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: The Center For Health Design The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how the Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at https://www.nursingihd.com/.
Fri, August 23, 2019
Teri Lura-Bennett, Lead Interior Designer at Johns Hopkins Health System and a registered nurse on how to reduce those incessant beeping noises in the hospital space. “I have an Apple Watch and when I’m driving it will tap me when it’s time to turn, and it would be as simple as that. A little tap and a visual code that says, room 422,” Says Teri about a possible tech solution to the beeping noises problem. This and more on what it’s like to be a healthcare designer and a nurse on today’s episode of Healthcare Interior Design 2.0 - The Lightning Round! Learn more about The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design by visiting: http://www.NursingIHD.com. This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa —a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. After 46 years, Porcelanosa is still a family-owned business, and with more than 970 stores in 150 countries, they are champions of a healthier planet. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting http://porcelanosa.com . This episode is sponsored by Stance Healthcare . It’s 2019 and the best, most comfortable, beautiful, cleanable, durable and long lasting furniture for the hospital and healthcare space is a big freaking deal for designers. The award winning Stance Healthcare specializes in furniture for the healthcare environment that doesn’t sacrifice comfort. Check out their complete catalog at: http://stancehealthcare.com . Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners: • The Center For Health Design • The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how The Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at https://www.nursingihd.com/ .
Fri, August 09, 2019
My guest today is Amy Mays, Interior Design Practice Leader at HDR’s New York, New York architecture studio. “There are kiosk check-ins and wait time calculators so members are constantly informed,” says Amy about the changing face of waiting rooms at Kaiser Permanente. She draws an analogy between a patient waiting for their appointment and a passenger on an airplane. When there is zero communication from the pilot, the passenger begins to worry and anxiety increases. You can easily see the parallel with waiting rooms. Learn more about Amy Mays and HDR by visiting: https://www.hdrinc.com . Find HDR on Instagram by searching for @hdr_inc, on Twitter @hdrarchitecture and on LinkedIn by searching for Health at HDR. Thank you to our industry partners: The Center For Health Design The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how the Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . Connect to a community of clinicians and others interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at https://www.nursingihd.com/. And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit http://AAHID.org for more info. In part 1 of the episode you will learn: What is special and different about one of HDR’s latest projects at Hartford Hospital Bone and Marrow Institute and what designers can learn from this innovative project about the future of healthcare design. The integration of cutting-edge technology and hospitality in healthcare projects in a brand new way. How physicians are getting more involved in envisioning new design projects to include the clinician’s perspective. How new healthcare design projects include empowering patients through technology and community building. How HDR’s Kaiser Grande Chino project is totally different than other Kaiser hospitals, and how Kaiser is leading the way in new healthcare design models through its program, “Reimagining Ambulatory Care.” When Kaiser calls its patients “members”, the experience changes for patients. What it means to the future of healthcare design when HDR helped Kaiser reimagine its Chino location by transforming the existing waiting rooms into community classrooms, self check-in kiosks, and wait time calculators giv
Fri, August 09, 2019
In the second part of my conversation with Amy Mays, Interior Design Practice Leader at HDR’s New York, New York architecture studio, Amy shares what it was like to walk into the operating room to have 20 strangers staring at her right before her serious brain surgery, and how that experience changed her approach to healthcare design. “I ended up having a benign brain tumor and it blew my world apart fairly quickly,” says Amy. That story and more on the changing face of healthcare design from one of the largest architecture firms in the world, on part 2 of today’s episode. Learn more about Amy Mays and HDR by visiting: https://www.hdrinc.com . Find HDR on Instagram by searching for @hdr_inc, on Twitter @hdrarchitecture and on LinkedIn by searching for Health at HDR. Thank you to our industry partners: The Center For Health Design The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how the Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . Connect to a community of clinicians and others interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at https://www.nursingihd.com/. And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit http://AAHID.org for more info. In part 2 of the episode you will learn: What it’s like to work for one of the largest architecture firms in the world. What transparency looks like during the initial stages of a project. What makes a project successful. How HDR helps their hospital clients with fundraising. Are healthcare systems in New York different then the rest of the United States and is New York a trendsetter in healthcare interior design? How are color palettes in healthcare design different on the east coast? How does empathy play a role in healthcare design and has that changed in the past 10 years? How Amy’s brain surgery two years ago gave her a completely different perspective on the way a healthcare space should be designed. Amy’s internship and love of pediatric healthcare design influenced her decision to move permanently into the field. Amy’s role in IIDA’s New York Chapter and what it’s like being the president of the chapter.
Fri, July 26, 2019
Today I’m joined by the wicked smart, funny and talented Sara Parsons, Principal at Gallun Snow - a nationally recognized interior design firm that specializes in healing, learning and community environments. She says, “As convenience junkies here in the States, I’d bet that by the year 2040, we’re going to have more healthcare on our terms.” Sara shares how the future of preventative wellness will be integrated into the shopping experience and what designers need to know to be prepared for the changes in healthcare already underway. Learn more about Sara Parsons and Gallun Snow Interior Design by visiting http://gallunsnow.com . Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit AAHID.org for more info. In part one of this episode you will learn: What healthcare design will look in the year 2040 from Sara’s perspective and what changes are already underway that support her theory. The growth of consumer based medical care and how this will affect patient centered care. The growth of mixed use spaces will help busy Americans get the wellness prevention they need, and revolutionize healthcare and wellness care as we know it today. What current projects Sara and Gallun Snow are working on in collaboration with HKS and BSA Life Structures and common goals to create a “uniform” design. The new healthcare design idea of creating a landing location in a community so the intellectual property of the specialist can come and go to benefit the community without the building having to be uniquely outfitted to each speciality. The advantages of building your brand in an aesthetic way. How to select art in a healthcare setting that is specific to a region and a patient demographic. The importance of going to the community (where the healthcare space is built) and finding what resources are local. The stories Sara overheard about the artwork in a healthcare space Gallun Snow designed from the end users of the building. Featured Product Porcelanosa’s KRION® Solid Surface Material is made out of two-thirds natural minerals and a low percentage of high-resistance resins. KRION® is available in an array of colors, can be thermocurved or backlit, and is antibacterial – making it a perfect product for the healthcare industry. KRION® is also highly resistant to impacts and external elements (such as fire, chemicals, and
Fri, July 26, 2019
In the second part of my conversation with the talented Sara Parsons, Principal at Gallun Snow Interior Design , Sara discusses the importance of artwork, color and furnishings in the behavioral and mental healthcare setting. She says, “The evolution of the design in behavioral and mental health facilities is exciting right now because there are finally options that don’t look like a prison aesthetic.” I’m excited to share the second part of our conversation now. Visit http://gallunsnow.com to learn more about Sara Parsons and Gallun Snow Interior Design. Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit http://aahid.org for more info. In part two of this episode you will learn: How focused listening to the client and a deeper understanding of the culture of the end users in a building leads to the most impactful of design details in a hospital or healthcare space. How to take a lesson learned on a previous project and apply it to your current one. How young Sara was influenced by her rehabilitation physician Dad’s story about a quadriplegic patient in the rehab hospital. Sara’s recommendations to new designers just starting out or those in the field or existing interior designers who want to move into the healthcare design space. What makes the design of a healthcare space successful for Sara. How to balance the needs of the healthcare provider with the patient and their family support systems through the design of a space. What it was like for Sara to be a designer when ADA laws were first passed and how that influenced a historic preservation of a project. Understanding the challenges of the people that Sara (and her team at Gallun Snow) design for is the fun part of healthcare design for Sara. The millennial generation is the generation that is most focused on making a difference and why this is important to the field of healthcare design. The evolution of the design in behavioral health is exciting right now because there are finally options that don’t create a prison aesthetic in the mental health setting. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, 1 in 5 adults in the US experience mental illness in their life in any given year. 1 in 25 adults experiences serious mental illness in the United States, in any given year. <
Fri, July 12, 2019
Today, I’m joined by Debra Levin, President and Chief Executive Officer of The Center for Health Design --a nonprofit organization whose mission it is to transform healthcare environments into a healthier, safer world through design research, education and advocacy, and the creative use of evidence based design. We discuss a range of topics, and Debra shares her journey into compassionate leadership and how her love of design and the desire to make a difference propelled The Center for Health Design into industry consciousness. Learn more Debra Levin and The Center for Health Design by visiting http://healthdesign.org . The Center of Health Design also happens to be our industry partner! Learn how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers , thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit http://aahid.org for more info. In part 1 of this episode you will learn: How the very rare McDonalds meal and Etch A Sketch are what Debra remembers about getting her tonsils out as a kid. How Debra always wanted to make a difference in the world and that was her driving force. The charming and funny story about 12 year old Debra who decorated every surface of her room with brown and white zebra striped sheets! The story of how Debra’s “aha” moment came during her senior year of college when she was the ASID National Student President. How when Debra met a designer who designed rooms for kids with special needs, it rocked her world. In college Debra ran a student conference in the Rocky Mountain region for ASID and how the experience influenced her career path. What happened when the position for Executive Director at CHD opened up 30 years ago and how it changed Debra’s life. The bright spot of Debra’s work in 2019 at The Center for Health Design. Why Debra’s personality gets excited by the blank page and what this means for her work at CHD. What is the Center for Health Design’s EDAC Certification and how it benefits healthcare industry professionals nationwide and globally. Who has inspired and influenced Debra throughout her life and her career. Featured Product Porcelanosa’s KRION® Solid Surface Material is made out of two-thirds natural minerals and a low percentage of high-resistance resins. KRION® is availabl
Fri, July 12, 2019
In the second part of my conversation with Debra Levin, CEO and President of The Center for Health Design, you’ll hear about Debra’s "aha" moment when she was with her dying mom in the ICU and subsequent hospice care. That, and how healthcare has radically changed in the past 10 years with the blurring of the lines between retail, hospitality and healthcare. To learn more about The Center for Health Design , please visit: http://healthdesign.org . The Center for Health Design also happens to be our industry partner! Learn how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit AAHID.org for more info. In part 2 of this episode you will learn: When Debra’s mom spent her final days in the ICU and hospice care, Debra’s role as leader for CHD and her role as daughter came together. A personal story about how vulnerability was important in Debra’s opening talk at CHD Expo , after the passing of her mom. How Evidence Based Design is different now than it was 10 years ago. The increased accessibility of The Knowledge Repository at The Center makes it even easier for healthcare design professionals to get the evidence to do their best work. What the peer-reviewed HERD Journal is and how it can benefit your firm. What is changing in healthcare design is the blurring of the lines between retail, hospitality and healthcare, and why mixed-use space is going to continue to grow exponentially. Wisdom for the new designer and why not to let anything stop you from following your passion. Why healthcare design as a career can feed your soul because of its impact on others
Fri, June 28, 2019
Today I’m joined by Lisa Bonnet, Senior Interior Designer at the prestigious e4h - Environments for Health Architecture - a global architecture firm committed exclusively to the design of innovative health facilities. We discuss what’s it’s like to provide comfort to someone in a difficult situation or help someone celebrate a health milestone through the design of the hospital space. Lisa shares how far healthcare design has come in the last ten years with the story of how one husband had to sleep on the floor of the hospital room in an older labor and delivery unit where his wife just gave birth, because it was the only thing available. “The challenges of healthcare design are often like putting together a puzzle” , Lisa says, and it’s one of her favorite aspects of the work. Learn more about Lisa Bonnet and e4h architecture by visiting http://www.e4harchitecture.com/ . Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit https://aahid.org/ for more info. In this episode you will learn: The perception of healthcare design is changing from sterile applications to comfort, beauty and creativity all within hospital and healthcare code requirements. This is making healthcare a more attractive career choice for new designers just out of design school. Where Lisa finds her design inspiration, including the last time she was pumping gas at a gas station. The story of how a husband in a labor and delivery unit wanted to sleep with his wife in the hospital room, and near his new born child, and the only thing the nurse could offer him was a blanket and the floor. The challenges of putting together what sometimes feels like a puzzle is one of Lisa’s favorite aspects of healthcare design and how to put all those moving parts together in a design. Encouraging flexibility and fostering communication between the owner and the general contractor and the design team is a key factor to working through onsite issues. How e4h makes each facility unique according to their geographical location. How planning experts and partners of e4h will engage the town or city surrounding the hospital during the research phase of the project to get their buy in. What advice Lisa has for new healthcare designers who are not
Fri, June 28, 2019
In the second part of my conversation with Lisa Bonnet, Senior Interior Designer at the prestigious e4h - Environments for Health Architecture, Lisa discusses the advancements in surface products in the hospital space that have contributed to the reduction of Hospital-Acquired Infections. In older hospitals, countertops around sinks have traditionally been unhygienic areas where bacteria and other icky stuff tend to hang out. As Lisa shares, research has shown that with the introduction of revolutionary products like seamless, solid surface and antibacterial countertops that can be shaped and curved to meet the aesthetic and code requirements of the hospital and the design team, HAI’s have been significantly reduced. Lisa wrote an article about this subject in Medical Construction and Design Magazine entitled, How Sterile is Too Sterile? She unpacks that article more here in part 2 of the episode. Read the article here: https://mcdmag.epubxp.com/i/853600-jul-aug-2017/22?m4= To learn more about Lisa Bonnet and e4h architecture visit: http://www.e4harchitecture.com/ . Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit http://aahid.org for more info. In this episode you will learn: Some of the biggest successes are some of the smallest details on a project. How e4h studies ALL the nuances of a project, for example, where the patient’s empty suitcase is placed in the hospital room, so it is out of the staff’s way. In the 90’s, the industry started using products that had soft, organic textures and wood look products to provide more of a hospitality or residential aesthetic. That is still common today as a result of patient input and competition among hospitals that desire this aesthetic. How seamless, solid surface and antibacterial countertops that can be shaped and curved to meet the aesthetic and code requirements of the hospital and the design team have significantly helped reduce Hospital Acquired Infections (HAI’s). The evolution of hospitals embracing the patient-centered design is the direct result of input from many stakeholders including patients, infection prevention specialists, the environmental services team Why Lisa’s current favorite project is a long term acute reha
Fri, June 14, 2019
Today I’m joined by Scott McFadden, Director of Design at BSA LifeStructures --an architectural and engineering firm that designs facilities to support, enhance and inspire healing, learning and discoveries. Scott is brilliant and passionate, and generously shares his wisdom from his 30 years of design work. My favorite part of the conversation was learning about one of BSA’s latest projects called, Giving Hope Family Centers , the first of its kind in the United States, designed for people with physical and intellectual disabilities like autism. As Scott shares, “The existence of such a place will help thousands of people of any age and their families come from all over the world for various health and medical support. The facility will include a huge recreational component, with bowling alleys, swimming pools, a movie theater and an education component, including job training.” To learn more about Scott McFadden and BSA Life Structures, visit: https://bsalifestructures.com Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit AAHID.org for more info. In this episode you will learn: Why it’s important to always look for a YES for a window in the patient room, not just to let natural light in, but to give a patient who is in bed with limited mobility, a view. When to push back on a design issue on a project and why. The details of a current BSA project, “Giving Hope Family Centers”, the first of its kind in the United States, designed for people with physical and intellectual disabilities. How to support clients who suddenly have to place a hospital project on hold because of budget issues. What visionary healthcare means to Scott and BSA Life Structures. What healthcare is going to look like in the year 2040. Physicians are going to attack disease in the future and that will change how the physical space is designed. Where Scott finds his current design inspiration. How empathy plays a role in design in 2019. How the hospitality industry has been a game changer for healthcare designers and made it easier to design comfortable and beautiful healing spaces. Why the integration of retail corridors in hospitals is beco
Fri, June 14, 2019
In the second part of my conversation with Scott McFadden, Director of Design at BSA LifeStructures --an architectural and engineering firm that designs facilities to support, enhance and inspire healing, learning and discoveries-- you’ll hear how on larger projects, the team builds what they call a life size “Cardboard City” in a big warehouse to test out the plan, show it to the client, and then reassess what they’ve learned. It’s fascinating and so is this episode. Learn more about Scott and BSA Life Structures at: https://www.bsalifestructures.com/ Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Enhance your professional credibility by earning the Certified Healthcare Interior Design credential. Visit http://aahid.org for more info. In this episode you will learn: BFA’s discovery and collaboration process at the beginning of a project includes large scale models, and puzzles presented on tables to clients and staff who get to participate in this deeply experiential and engaging process. Once the floorplan is solid , the team builds what they call a life size “Cardboard City” in a big warehouse to test out the plan, show it to the client, and then reassess what they’ve learned. One of Scott’s favorite parts of healthcare design is the ability to create a hospital that doesn’t feel like a hospital. Infection control is a huge issue and the durability of products that last 20+ years is forefront in the minds of designers, architects and planners. A day in the life of Scott at BSA Life Structures and what it takes to keep the energy high in his career. Advice to new healthcare designers starti
Fri, May 24, 2019
In part 2 of my interview with Avigail Eisenstadt, CEO, Founder and Principal Interior Designer at AE Design Group, Avigail generously shares the nooks and crannies of the teams’ process of a healthcare project, from interviewing the staff to how the team decides what is best for improving the resident experience in every corner of the building. I was surprised by the depth of detail that is involved in a nursing home and assisted living project and impressed by the outcome of the work.Learn more about Avigail Eisenstadt and her firm AE Design group by visiting http://aedesigngroup.com . You can also reach out to Avigail directly by sending her an email to ae@aedesigngroup.com . Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Learn more about their certification program by visiting AAHID.org. http://aahid.org . In this episode you will learn: How Avigail and her team integrate beauty, compassion and code requirements in every project. AE Design Group’s protocol from the moment they first visit a prospective client to the moment they win a project. How the team integrates the residents’ culture into the design of the space and how to integrate various cultures under one roof. The value of an endearing conversation between Avigail and a resident in an assisted living facility she designed. Why in memory care facilities, patterns on flooring and walls must be kept at a minimum . Why colors matter in senior living design. The best places on social media to follow AE Design Group and see pictures of new projects. FEATURED PRODUCT Porcelanosa’s <a href= "x-msg://8/Learn%20more%20about%20KRIO
Fri, May 24, 2019
Today, I’m joined by Avigail Eisenstadt, CEO, Founder and Principal Interior Designer at AE Design Group. We discuss what is was really like for Avigail to land her first nursing home gig only one day after graduating from New York School of Interior Design, and her surprise of how much she loved it! We also speak about how Avigail blends her own unique style of hospitality design with her healthcare projects, and how healthcare won her over because of the profound and direct impact it has on the lives of residents, families and staff of the nursing homes, assisted living facilities and environments for aging she and her team design. Learn more about Avigail Eisenstadt and her firm AE Design group by visiting http://aedesigngroup.com . You can also reach out to Avigail directly by sending her an email to ae@aedesigngroup.com . Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about how CHD can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org . And to the American Association of Healthcare Interior Designers, thank you for your support of this program. Learn more about their certification program by visiting AAHID.org. http://aahid.org . In this episode you will learn: How Avigail serendipitously found her first nursing home project just out of interior design school and how that put her on the road to healthcare design. Avigail's answer to my question, "What makes a dream project the best nursing home/senior living community in the world?" How you can still make an assisted living space beautiful with a limited budget. When you have empathy for one of the hardest life transitions of an older adult into an assisted living space, you can then begin to design the very best space for a resident. The family’s perspective when they tour a prospective assisted living facility and why the last room (where the family sits down to talk) is the most important. The consideration of practical details to keep seniors feeling independent, like faucet in the bathroom has to be a level handle rather than a knob because it can be hard to grasp and turn. The importance of considering the mindset of both the staff and the resident. How a post occupancy evaluation of Avigail’s very first project shaped her vision of future projects. The influence of high-end hospitality on healthcare design and how this has changed in the past 10 years since AE Design Group was established. FEATURED PRODUC
Fri, May 10, 2019
Join in today’s episode with our lovely guest Aimee Burmaster Hicks — Principal at Page Architecture firm at their Texas location. Aimee specializes in space planning and interior design development for corporate and healthcare clients. Her leadership role with Page builds on her commitment and collaborative approach to her work. “I like the idea of freedom within commitment. Being truly committed to my work allows me to take design risks, and the projects I work on are better for it,” Aimee says, adding, “Collaboration is key. Everyone has something to contribute to the project process.” My favorite part of our conversation was the story Aimee shared about how in order to win a project, the developer asked Aimee and her team to design a hospital out of legos in two hours (without prior knowledge and in the developer’s office) to assess how well the team could collaborate. That and how Aimee came into healthcare design kicking and screaming and now she loves it! Aimee realized at an early age that she had the talent and ambition to work as a creative professional. “Being an interior designer is all I’ve ever wanted to do,” Aimee explains. With that goal set, she prepared for her career by graduating from Texas Christian University with a Bachelor of Science in Interior Design, a program accredited by the Foundation for Interior Design Education Research (FIDER). With her work, she takes great pride in applying lessons learned from her previous projects to add value to the next. “Each new project brings the opportunity to build upon both my technical knowledge and creativity,” she says. “ A new project also brings the chance to work with new team members I may not have worked with before. I like this relationship-building because it allows me to expand my ‘go-to’ resources within Page. I really feel that each project I do is better than the last.” Aimee’s portfolio of projects include the 250,000-square-foot Children’s Medical Center at Legacy in Plano; a 90,000-square-foot corporate headquarters in Dallas for Concentra; the 82,000-square-foot Baylor Surgical Hospital at Park Place in Fort Worth; the 63,000-square-foot Baylor Medical Center Uptown in Dallas; a 146,000-square-foot Hospital and 80,000-square-foot Medical Office Building for Forest Park Medical Center in Austin; the 450,000-square-foot tower, in addition to 45,000-square-feet of renovation of the Saint Francis Hospital in Tulsa; and 29,000-square-foot Solomon Associate’s office in Dallas. Learn more about Aimee and her gallery of gorgeous work at Page Architecture by visiting: http://pagethink.com . A big thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about the incredible research, advocacy, and education work The Center For Health Design is doing at http:/
Fri, April 19, 2019
Join in this special interview with Rebecca Rothstein -- Board Chairwoman, Executive Committee Chair and founding member of Teen Cancer America -- an organization founded by The Who’s, Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend. The mission of Teen Cancer America is to raise the bar on how young people with cancer are treated by establishing specialized facilities and services to help meet their physical and emotional needs. Rebecca was a dream to interview. She’s the real deal; authentic and big hearted. She shares how teens and young adults with cancer are selected for a board of advisors and described how they get to design their own teen lounges and spaces within their units. Yes, that’s patients designing for their own unique needs in the hospital setting! If you want to hear something new and heart warming in the world of hospital design, then you are going to love this episode! Rebecca Rothstein is a Managing Director and Private Wealth Advisor at Merrill Lynch Private Bank & Investment Group and became involved with Teen Cancer through her friendship with musician Roger Daltrey. She has been quoted as saying “It’s always been Roger’s dream to bring the teen cancer cause to America, and I’m honored to help him achieve that vision.” In 2017, Forbes named Rebecca one of “America’s Top Wealth Advisors” and in 2018 recognized her as the #1 “Top Women’s Wealth Advisor.” She focuses on helping high-net- worth individuals, families and institutions pursue their financial goals through wealth management and tax minimization strategies and legacy planning services. Rebecca believes in the power of building positive relationships with her clients and truly, she’s got a heart of gold. Learn more about Rebecca’s work with Teen Cancer America and all the cool things the organization is doing to help TYA’s by visiting: https://teencanceramerica.org/ Watch the trailer for the documentary Cancer Rebellion directed and filmed by cancer survivor Hernan Barangan, who travels to all 50 states to uncover the stories of others who've also been diagnosed with cancer in their youth here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bAJdxZX6Ic A big thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! Learn more about the incredible research, advocacy, and education work The Center For Health Design is doing at http://healthdesign.org . You can gain access to the Center’s Knowledge Repository which contains over 2,500 references and key point summaries on multiple topics in different healthcare settings by becoming a Center For Health Design Affiliate. And finally, I’d like to thank the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers for their support of this show. Find out more about their certification program at http://aahid.org . In the e
Wed, March 20, 2019
Today I have something a bit different and special to offer you--Two fabulous guests instead of one talking about one of my favorite subjects and I know yours too--healthcare interior design and environments for aging! I had the pleasure of talking to Kristin D. Zeit - publisher of Healthcare Design and Environments for Aging magazines, and Jennifer Kovacs Silvis, editor-in-chief of Healthcare Design and Environments for Aging magazines at Emerald Expositions. A national award-winning journalist, Jennifer Kovacs Silvis oversees the day-to-day operation of the B2B trade publications that serve as the premier sources of information and inspiration for professionals involved in the planning, design, and construction of healthcare facilities and senior living communities. Jennifer is also a key contributor to the planning and production of the brands’ live events, including the annual Healthcare Design Expo & Conference, HCD Forum, and Environments for Aging Expo & Conference. She’s been with HCD and EFA for nine years and is the former editor-in-chief of construction magazine Healthcare Building Ideas. A veteran reporter and editor, Jennifer is a firm believer in the connection between good design and better outcomes. Kristin D. Zeit is publisher (and former editor-in-chief) of Healthcare Design and Environments for Aging, the leading magazine and event brands serving architects, interior designers, providers and operators in these industries. She has covered the commercial architecture and design industries in the media for the past 13 years, including the hospitality and retail sectors. She has a master’s degree in magazine journalism from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism and her magazines have won numerous awards during her tenure for excellence in writing, reporting, and design. She also launched and manages the HCD Forum, an invitation-only education and networking event for high-level professionals in the healthcare design field. My conversation with Jen and Kristin was lighthearted and fun, and filled with that mission driven enthusiasm familiar to everyone in the healthcare design and environments for aging industry. I loved learning about the latest news in healthcare and hospitality and some of the fabulous design details of senior living design projects that are popping up in cities across the country. You can learn more about Kristin Zeit and Jennifer Kovacs Silvis, Healthcare Design and Environments for Aging by visiting https://www.hcdmagazine.com and https://www.efamagazine.com/ . Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! You can learn more about the incredible research, advocacy, and education work The Center For Health Design is doing at htt
Thu, February 14, 2019
Join in this refreshing conversation with Tiana Lemons, Senior Associate, Healthcare Studio Leader for architectural firm Orcutt | Winslow’s Nashville office. For the past 25 years, Tiana has given her talent to designing healthcare facilities across the country. Both for-profit and not-for-profit organizations have benefited from her keen eye and design sensibilities, including HCA, The Healthcare Corporation of America, and Regional Care. My favorite part of this conversation was how Tiana brought me into her world of healthcare design, how she stays organized on big projects and how she combines her vision for a project with the vision of her strategic partners--developers and architects alike. Detail-oriented and highly organized, Tiana is an interior designer with business know-how. She has a positive, creative, and innovative approach to design. She presents a strong visual style with a high level of design ability, experience, professionalism, and the capacity to manage multiple projects. Tiana is also a leader within her profession. A member of IIDA since 1991, she has served on the IIDA TN Chapter board for the past 5 years and continues to serve in an advisory role to the board. She has also volunteered as a liaison for IIDA headquarters to the ASHE board of directors. At the 2016 ASHE Conference (in Denver), she presented alongside other design professionals for the “Design Trends to Support Patient Center Design.” She continues to mentor young professionals and leads by example. Presented alongside other design professionals at the 2016 ASHE Conference on the topic of “Design Trends to Support Patient Center Design” Most likely to be found at a Keith Urban concert—she saw him live seven times in one year. Does that make her a super fan? Yes. Tiana has got a heart of gold. She volunteers with multiple non-profit organizations and is always the first to lend a hand. To get directly in touch with Tiana, email her at lemons.t@owp.com or visit http://www.owp.com . To download the paper “Journey on a Gurney” visit this link: http://www.owp.com/downloads/journey-on-a-gurney.pdf Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! You can learn more about the incredible research, advocacy, and education work The Center For Health Design is doing at http://healthdesign.org , and you can gain access to an amazing, prolific collection of healthcare design resources by becoming a Center For Health Design affiliate. Thank you to The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers for their support of this show! Find out more about their certification program at http://aahid.org . In this episode you will learn: How consumers now have a choice when it
Thu, January 31, 2019
Join in this intimate conversation with Jocelyn Stroupe, Director of Healthcare Interiors At Cannon Design--an integrated global design firm that unites a dynamic team of architects, engineers, industry experts and builders driven by a singular goal: to help solve their clients’ and society’s greatest challenges. My favorite part of the conversation was the wisdom Jocelyn shared around the humanity of healthcare design and how to bring in all parts of the project--economics, community, culture and the human experience. With 25 years of industry experience, Jocelyn is a leading expert in the health market. Jocelyn thrives on uniting the disciplines of planning, programming, branding, and facility management with cohesive, comforting interior design. She is especially invested in understanding the unique needs of all users – patients, visitors, providers and staff – in their healthcare settings.. Jocelyn derives inspiration for spatial and interior design work from many typologies but finds various themes in nature particularly fascinating – patterns and color, relationships between humans and the natural world, the changing phases of plant life. These studies provide Jocelyn with keen insights about placemaking and the design needs of people in these living spaces. As a result, her interiors evoke an optimism that creates positive experiences for patients, family, and staff. Jocelyn’s colleagues and clients appreciate her approachable, collaborative and genuine approach – and her intuitive approach to creating healing environments. Jocelyn is a frequent speaker and contributor to Healthcare Design and the Center for Health Design, among other outlets, and she has recently been named to Healthcare Design’s HCD 10. The annual awards program honors professionals across 10 categories of nominees, shining a spotlight on the broad spectrum of stars and their contributions to our industry, specifically recognizing accomplishments over the last year. Jocelyn has advanced Cannon Design to one of the most recognized in the industry – ranked the No. 2 Healthcare Interior Firm on Interior Design’s “Giants” List in 2017 and No. 5 Healthcare Design firm by Modern Healthcare in 2018. You can learn more about Jocelyn Stroupe and Cannon Design at: www.cannondesign.com . The Center For Health Design has joined us as an industry partner! You can learn more about the incredible research, advocacy, and education work The Center For Health Design is doing at http://healthdesign.org , and you can gain access to an amazing, prolific collection of healthcare design resources by becoming a Center For Health Design Affiliate. Thank you to The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers for their support of this show. Find out more about their certification program at http://aahid.org .
Wed, January 16, 2019
Join in this super informative conversation with Rebecca Brennan, principal and founder of Design Studio Blue, a design studio providing full-service interior architectural design services nationally. Rebecca has been following her creative passion through the practice of interior design for over 22 years with a focus in healthcare design. Her knowledge of and experience with healthcare environments ranges from single practice clinics to international acute care medical campuses. I so enjoyed my conversation with Rebecca. She was incredibly generous in walking us through her (and her team’s) process of designing a hospital setting from the moment patients walk through the door, until the time they leave and every step in between. Rebecca shares her experience and knowledge by speaking nationally about healthcare design and Integrated Lean Project Delivery. Along with education, skills, and experience, Rebecca is a firm believer in continued growth through certification. Rebecca became a board certified healthcare interior designer through The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers AAHID and has served as President Elect, President, and Past-President of the national certification board. She is a specialist in the areas of evidence-based design, sustainable design, lean project delivery, and healthcare interior design. Learn more about Rebecca Brennan by visiting Design Studio Blue online at: https://designstudio-blue.com/ . Thank you to our industry partner The Center For Health Design! You can learn more about the incredible research, advocacy, and education work The Center For Health Design is doing at http://healthdesign.org , and you can gain access to an amazing, prolific collection of healthcare design resources by becoming a Center For Health Design affiliate. Thank you to The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers for their support of this show! Find out more about their certification program at http://aahid.org . In the episode you will learn: * How Rebecca (and her team) solve the problem of unwanted noises like incessant beeping in the hospital patient room. * What new healthcare interior designers can do to increase their empathy in the design of hospitals and healthcare settings. * How hospitality is playing a role in the hospital setting * What the consumer is asking for in healthcare design and how designers are listening. * What is trending for 2019 (and beyond) in healthcare design. * Why artwork is important and how to integrate color from the natural environment. * What it means to look at the city or town surrounding a hospital to integrate landmarks into the hospital setting. * What Integrated Lean Project Delivery is and how to apply it to projects. * How to collaborat
Thu, December 20, 2018
Join in this fascinating conversation with Joanna Frank, founding President & CEO of the Center for Active Design, the leading non-profit organization that uses design to foster healthy and engaged communities. The mission of the Center for Active Design is to reduce the risk of obesity and chronic diseases by promoting physical activity and healthy food access through the design of buildings, streets, and neighborhoods. My favorite part of my conversation with Joanna was exploring and unpacking The Urban Land Institute’s Building Healthy Places Toolkit. The Center for Active design was a co-author and expert content advisor for this resource, and Joanna had some great insights into the toolkit’s 21 evidence-based recommendations for promoting health at the building or project scale. Prior to launching the Center, Joanna worked for the City of New York, where her positions included Director of Active Design and Director of the NYC FRESH program. Before working for the City, Joanna was a Partner at Bright City Development, LLC where she was responsible for the development of mixed-use residential buildings using sustainable design criteria. Joanna is a member of the American Heart Association Workplace Health Steering Committee. Inspired by the precedent of design impacting public health in the 19th century as recognized by the massive reduction in the spread of infectious diseases, Active Design builds on health research showing that design can impact today’s biggest challenges around the physical, mental, and social well-being of communities around the world. The Center for Active Design is the operator for Fitwel, a unique building certification that positively impacts occupant health and productivity through an integrated approach to workplace design and operations. Fitwel’s development was led by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the General Services Administration (GSA) To download the Building Healthcare Places toolkit, visit https://centerforactivedesign.org/buildinghealthyplaces and to learn more about Fitwel, visit http://fitwel.org . The Center For Health Design has joined us as an industry partner! You can learn more about the incredible research, advocacy, and education work The Center For Health Design is doing at http://healthdesign.org , and you can gain access to an amazing, prolific collection of healthcare design resources by becoming a Center For Health Design Affiliate. Thank you to The American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers for their support of this show. Find out more about their certification program at http://aahid.org . In the episode you will learn: A new study just out from The United Health Foundation reports the obesity rate in the US has now excee
Fri, December 07, 2018
Join in this soulful conversation with nationally known physician and PBS host Dr. Richard Jackson of the Designing Healthy Communities Series, viewed in 4 million homes in the United States. Dr. Jackson is Professor emeritus at the Fielding School of Public Health at the University of California, Los Angeles. A pediatrician, he has served in many leadership positions with the California Health Department, including the highest as the State Health Officer. My favorite part of our conversation was Dr. Jackson’s down-to-earth vibe, how easy he was to talk to and how generous he was in sharing human stories and information about healthcare design and important public health issues we face today. For nine years Dr. Jackson was Director of the Center for Disease Control’s (CDC) National Center for Environmental Health and received the Presidential Distinguished Service award. In October, 2011 he was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. Dr. Jackson was instrumental in establishing the California Birth Defects Monitoring Program and in the creation of state and national laws to reduce risks from pesticides, especially to farm workers and to children. While at CDC he established major environmental public health programs and instituted the federal effort to “biomonitor” chemical levels in the US population. He has received its Hero Award from the Breast Cancer Fund, Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Public Health Law Association and the New Partners for Smart Growth, the John Heinz Award for national leadership in the Environment, and the Sedgwick Medal, the highest award of the American Public Health Association. In 2015 he received the Henry Hope Reed Award for his contributions to the field of Architecture. Reach out to Dr. Jackson by sending an email to: dickjackson@ucla.edu. In the episode you will learn: How Dr. Jackson’s medical traumas as a child influenced his decision to become a pediatrician and later, his work in public health. The challenges that hospitals face with its surrounding communities and ideas to solve them. How today’s healthcare architects, developers, and designers can help design more sustainable buildings that make patients and their families feel more comfortable. Many of the creative details the architecture firm David M. Schwarz used in the design of Cook Children’s Medical Center in Forth Worth, Texas like establishing a comfort room on the top level of the hospital (closest to heaven) for children in hospice care. What Florence Nightingale did for wounded soldiers in hospitals during the Crimean War that still influences hospital design today. How public health in the United States has helped us live 25 years longer. How the intelligent design of stairs in healthcare buildings is essential to public health and building human interactions. How to integrate the hospital setting
Mon, November 19, 2018
Join in this intimate conversation with Jane Rohde, Principal and Founder of JSR Associates Inc.——an architecture and interior design firm, specializing (and known for) senior living. Jane believes in a global cultural shift toward de-institutionalized senior living facilities through research, advocacy, and humanistic approaches to care. She and her team are committed to supportive design that recognizes elders’ individuality and results in thriving, joyful environments. It was hard to choose a favorite part of the interview because the entire conversation was magical. If I had to choose a favorite part, it was how Jane refers to her years in this field as a “covert operation”——asking senior living residents the right questions and then listening attentively to their answers, sneaking into management and operations meetings to uncover the biggest challenges and then working tirelessly to solve them. In 2015, Jane received the first Changemaker Award for Environments for Aging from The Center for Health Design and in 2018, she received the ASID Design for Humanity Award. In October 2018, she was a Women in Design honoree awarded by Healthcare Design Magazine. Jane has been recognized as an Honorary Alumni of Clemson University for her teaching contribution to the Architecture + Health program. Jane is certified by the American College of Healthcare Architects, the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Designers, and is a LEED Accredited Professional. She sits on various senior living, healthcare, and sustainability committees to support the creation of a tipping point for person-centered care environments like The Research Advisory Council which is the research arm of The Center for Health Design, the 2010 Cycle of the Guidelines for Design and Construction of Healthcare Facilities, and the ASHRAE 189.2 High Performance Healthcare Facilities Committee. Her specialties include: Senior living consulting, healthcare consulting, architecture and interior design for senior living and healthcare projects, focus groups, facilitations and development consulting. Learn more about Jane Rohde and JSR by visiting: http://www.jsrassociates.net/ Here’s what you’ll learn in the interview: Germany’s fascinating medieval era community — The Fuggerei—one of the earliest known retirement communities where widowers and widows when to live, eat and wander through gardens when they were no longer able to work. How Jane opened her business because she saw a wide gap between operations, user needs, and design. She set out to close that gap by designing fully functioning spaces to better serve residents and staff. The story of Jane’s friend and senior living resident Miriam who influenced Jane to become a leader in making changes to the senior living environment, and the table Jane designed to help wheelchair bound Miriam
Tue, November 06, 2018
Join in this heartwarming conversation with healthcare interior designer and President of the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Design (AAHID), Libby Laguta. Libby has over 35 years of healthcare experience working with hospitals, senior living communities, behavioral health, cancer treatments centers, and women and children’s centers. She sits on the board of directors of the AAHID, whose goal is to advance the practice of Healthcare Interior Design. You’ll learn so much from the conversation with Libby Laguta , including: How to distinguish yourself as a healthcare interior designer by becoming a CHID - Certified Healthcare Interior Designer® through the American Academy of Healthcare Interior Design. How the AAHID facilitates mentoring. Why not everything needs to look like the deep South. The importance of knowing your residents. The danger of losing the hands-on aspect of design. The therapeutic value of trees and other biophilia. How the consumer is influencing healthcare designers to make patients and families feel more at ease and comfortable in their physical environment. How hospitality design is influencing the design of senior living communities by giving dignity back to residents who desire safe beautiful and nurturing living environments. Why mergers and acquisitions are one of Libby’s favorite types of projects because it’s a big opportunity to improve caregiver and operations models. A sweet story about older adult resident Charlie at The Lodge at Bethany — an assisted living and memory care facility that Libby designed — who teaches weekly classes to kids on things like how to give a proper handshake. Pour yourself a hot cup of coffee and relax into this endearing conversation with our heart-centered guest Libby Laguta. Visit us at www.healthcareidpodcast.com or email us at info@healthcareidpodcast.com Featured Product: Porcelanosa’s KRION® Solid Surface Material is made out of two-thirds natural minerals and a low percentage of high-resistance resins. KRION® is available in an array of colors, can be thermocurved or backlit, and is antibacterial – making it a perfect product for the healthcare industry. KRION® is also highly resistant to impacts and external elements (such as fire, chemicals, and frost), and is easy to clean and maintain. Inspired by the properties of photocatalytic materials, Porcelanosa has evolved their KRION® Solid Surface material called <a href= "https:
Tue, November 06, 2018
Join in this intimate conversation with Ana Pinto-Alexander, award winning Principal and Group Director for Health Interiors at HKS Architects. When Ana became a parent of a sick child that needed help, it changed her life. She shares this incredible story with us, and talks about how this led her to design with greater empathy and hope, including the very hospital where her child had multiple surgeries! When a bone marrow patient has to spend 30 to 40 days recovering in a sealed, germ-free room, there’s only so much TV she or he can watch, and only so much reading they can do. That’s when the fusion of hospitality and healthcare design helps create a supportive, hopeful patient experience. Ana shares what’s happening at the leading edge of this fusion between hospitality and healthcare design. You’ll learn so much from this conversation with Ana Pinto-Alexander , including: Tips for putting yourself in the shoes of the patients you are designing for and designing with empathy. The importance of evidence-based artwork in medical spaces, even difficult ones like sterile recovery rooms for bone marrow transplant patients. Doing research, learning from staff about their needs. The role of a nurse respite area. Gathering data on outcomes; the results of a new design. Increasing patient and staff satisfaction through design. Creating a sense of community and connection through design in long-term healing environments (oncology, etc.). The benefits of integrated project delivery to eliminating waste and increasing learning. The importance of wayfinding, iconic artwork, and color in pediatric facilities. The relationship between holistic design, outcomes, and data in design. The value of spending a night in a hospital and observing a surgery. The ways hospitality trends are effecting healthcare design Integrating biophilia without live plants and with the ability to clean and sterilize. More effectively collaborating with clients and contractors and persuading them by educating about lifecycle cost and unexpected side-effects. Grab your favorite cup of tea and lean into this heartwarming conversation with our generous, insightful guest Ana Pinto-Alexander . Visit us at www.healthcareidpodcast.com or email us at info@healthcareidpodcast.com . Featured Product: Porcelanosa’s KRION® Solid Surface Material is made out of two-thirds natural minerals and a low percentage of high-resistance resins. KRION® is available in an array of colors, can be thermocurved or backlit, and is antibacterial – making it a perfect product for the healthcare industry. KRION® is also highly resistant to impacts and external elements (such as fire, chemicals, and frost), and is easy to clean an
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