Magazine

FM College ~ News & Articles

How to Keep Contaminants Away from Patients During a Renovation

Sep 23, 2024 | Public | 0 comments

There is a way to undergo hospital renovations without compromising patient care.

Regardless of the facility type, renovations can be stressful. In hospitals and other healthcare facilities, they can seem nearly impossible due to the fear of contamination and infecting patients. Though, it doesn’t have to be that way. Before a project begins, it is up to architects and designers to have a plan in place that keeps patients, visitors and staff contained from the renovation without compromising care.

Healthcare Facilities Today recently spoke with Ryan Ramsey, senior medical planner, Perkins&Will and Kyle Raschkow, healthcare market lead and senior project executive of BNBuilders on how to ensure patient safety during a renovation.

HFT: How do you manage dust and other contaminants to ensure a sterile environment? 

Kyle Raschkow: Managing dust is a challenge and inherent to completing construction in a hospital environment. In addition to implementing preventative measures, we instill a culture of cleanliness with all our staff and subcontractors onsite, which includes training around clean operations and alignment amongst the trades. We also require the use of advanced technology, specifically dustless roto hammers and sanders, in all our hospital projects to mitigate the movement of dust into sterile environments.

HFT: How do you minimize noise and vibrations that could affect patients, especially those in critical care areas? 

Raschkow: Communication with the hospital is key to understanding the constraints we will be under to get the work completed. These planning conversations establish if or when any noisy or vibratory work can occur onsite, setting the guardrails around what can get done in a day’s work. Phasing construction to occur at specific times and in short durations generally works best so that the hospital staff is not surprised or enduring noise and vibrations for long periods of time. Other considerations include prefabrication, completing work off-hours in non-24-hour care spaces, using vibration mats and insulated barriers, and where noise is unavoidable, issuing patient care kits that can include noise-canceling headphones.

HFT: How do you ensure that patient access to essential services is maintained and safe during construction? 

Ramsey: During construction documentation of any expansion or renovation project, our team spends time with facility engineers and department leaders to develop operational risk diagrams, which overlay staff, public, patient, and material streams before, during, and after construction to ensure essential services are safely maintained.

Raschkow:  Development, approval and implementation of clear ICRA plans, which emphasize the importance of temporary barrier construction and temporary wayfinding. For access to restricted areas, interim life safety plans (ILSM) are also required. It is important to ensure all hospital departments have input and understand these plans to avoid confusion following their implementation.

Mackenna Moralez is the associate editor of the facilities market.  

The post "How to Keep Contaminants Away from Patients During a Renovation" appeared first on Healthcare Facilities Today

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

DOE Offers $90M to Public Schools for Clean Energy Upgrades

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has opened applications for the 2025 Renew America’s Schools Prize, which will offer...

ASHRAE Releases Indoor Air Quality Guideline to Protect Against Wildfires

As wildfires and prescribed burns increasingly impact communities worldwide, the American Society of Heating,...

Back to Basics: Preventing Workplace Mold Exposure

Back to Basics is an article series that highlights important but possibly overlooked information facilities management...

UCHealth Reveals Plans for Memorial Hospital North Expansion

  UCHealth is planning a major expansion to Memorial Hospital North that will nearly double its size to meet the...

Green-steel hubs: A pathway to decarbonize the steel industry

Green-steel manufacturing is crucial for the steel industry and the planet, but decarbonizing the global steel production...