Comfortable healthcare environments contribute significantly to patient and staff well-being. By improving acoustics, you can:
High-performing acoustic solutions foster well-being for patients and staff across hospitals, clinics, and other care environments.
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of patients surveyed reported improved daytime rest*
of nurses reported that they did not have issues hearing during rounds*
Sourcesimprovement in sound leakage post-acoustic treatment, based on an emergency department case study**
When combined with evidence-based design approaches, high-performing acoustic solutions help develop healthcare institutions that encourage comfort for both patient and staff.
Acoustic comfort has a direct impact on patient recovery. Disturbances including equipment beeps, alarms, and conversations in the vicinity can be detrimental to patients' anxiety levels, sleep cycles, recovery speed, and other key physiological processes.
Miscommunication in healthcare environments has significant repercussions on the quality of healthcare provided. High speech intelligibility is key to reduced medical errors and smooth team processes.
Sensitive conversations can leak from one space to another, which can make patients uneasy. Privacy from non-staff is an essential component of patient care and can even affect patients' readiness to disclose critical information with health professionals.
Product materials, circularity, and durability are all necessary considerations in designing the office of the future, and they’re also required in green building certifications. Long-lasting products that can be recycled indefinitely are key to sustainability in both new constructions and retrofit projects.
Each and every area across healthcare facilities contributes to staff performance and patient experiences. Click on the room types below to learn more about the unique way in which acoustic comfort plays a role.
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Rockfon acoustic solutions help to develop calm and clean indoor spaces where patients are able to rest and staff can perform at their very best.
See how hospitals, clinics, and assisted living centres are optimising the acoustic performance of their institutions while upholding rigorous hygiene standards.
References
* Ryherd, Erica E., James E. West, Ilene J. Busch-Vishniac, and Kerstin Persson Waye. 2008. “Evaluating the Hospital Soundscape.” Acoustics Today 4 (4): 22. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.3058487.
** Olsen, Jon C., Brian Cutcliffe, and Bridget C. O’Brien. 2008. “Emergency Department Design and Patient Perceptions of Privacy and Confidentiality.” The Journal of Emergency Medicine 35 (3): 317–20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jemermed.2007.10.029.
We provide customers with a complete acoustic ceiling system offering, combining sound absorbing ceiling tiles and wall panels with suspension grid systems and accessories.