This pilot research project sought to provide a postoccupation assessment of a new mental health inpatient unit in East London, built under the Private Finance Initiative scheme. Qualitative discussion groups or unstructured interviews were used to explore the views of people who had been service users (but were currently well) and of nursing staff and consultants working in the new hospital. The participants gave their views on the aspects of the hospital which were beneficial or detrimental to well-being and the reasons for their views. Informants discussed hospital design in terms of: (1) respect and empowerment for people with mental illness; (2) security and surveillance versus freedom and openness; (3) territoriality, privacy, refuge,...
The role of courtyards and other outdoor spaces in the recovery of acute mental healthcare users has...
This paper contributes to the international literature examining design of inpatient settings for me...
How to design a psychiatric hospital? We would hear radically different answers to that question du...
This pilot research project sought to provide a postoccupation assessment of a new mental health inp...
Oeljeklaus L, Schmid H-L, Kornfeld Z, et al. Therapeutic landscapes and psychiatric care facilities:...
© 2015 Shadowfax Publishing and Informa UK Limited All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or par...
Although there has been a shift toward treatment in the home and the community, in the UK, inpatient...
Background: Loony Bins and madhouses; does the environment contribute to the wellbeing of mental hea...
This paper examines the implications for design of inpatient settings of community-based models of c...
The environment in psychiatric inpatient care is key to patient recovery and staff job satisfaction....
Therapeutic landscapes in hospital design: a qualitative assessment by staff and service users of th...
This paper reports on research framed by theories of therapeutic landscapes and the ways that the so...
Objective – The paper identifies dilemmas facing architects, planners and medical professionals in t...
Abstract Background Research shows that worn-out physical environments are obstacles to psychiatric ...
The pluralism that characterized the development of psychiatric services around the world created a ...
The role of courtyards and other outdoor spaces in the recovery of acute mental healthcare users has...
This paper contributes to the international literature examining design of inpatient settings for me...
How to design a psychiatric hospital? We would hear radically different answers to that question du...
This pilot research project sought to provide a postoccupation assessment of a new mental health inp...
Oeljeklaus L, Schmid H-L, Kornfeld Z, et al. Therapeutic landscapes and psychiatric care facilities:...
© 2015 Shadowfax Publishing and Informa UK Limited All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or par...
Although there has been a shift toward treatment in the home and the community, in the UK, inpatient...
Background: Loony Bins and madhouses; does the environment contribute to the wellbeing of mental hea...
This paper examines the implications for design of inpatient settings of community-based models of c...
The environment in psychiatric inpatient care is key to patient recovery and staff job satisfaction....
Therapeutic landscapes in hospital design: a qualitative assessment by staff and service users of th...
This paper reports on research framed by theories of therapeutic landscapes and the ways that the so...
Objective – The paper identifies dilemmas facing architects, planners and medical professionals in t...
Abstract Background Research shows that worn-out physical environments are obstacles to psychiatric ...
The pluralism that characterized the development of psychiatric services around the world created a ...
The role of courtyards and other outdoor spaces in the recovery of acute mental healthcare users has...
This paper contributes to the international literature examining design of inpatient settings for me...
How to design a psychiatric hospital? We would hear radically different answers to that question du...