Salutogenic Architecture in Healthcare Settings
- PMID: 28590652
- Bookshelf ID: NBK435851
- DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-04600-6_26
Salutogenic Architecture in Healthcare Settings
Excerpt
The term ‘salutogenic’ is widely used in healthcare architecture, even though very few healthcare architects have much of a handle on what the term means. Here, we clarify the key concepts of salutogenesis, demonstrate how they work and show how they have been designed into healthcare facilities to yield exemplary results.
The central idea is that there are three resources that combine to provide a Sense of Coherence—a forward thrust that resists the entropic forces of illness and infirmity. The sense of coherence is made up of resources that improve manageability—the capacity to maintain homeostasis and physical function; resources that improve comprehensibility—an ability to negotiate circumstances in order to maximise their benefit; and resources that enrich a sense of meaningfulness—the desires, causes and concerns that give us the need to resist illness in the first place.
Copyright 2017, The Author(s).
Sections
- Introduction
- The sense of Coherence
- The Generalised Resistance Resources
- The Biochemical Response to Design
- Aesthetics, the Built Environment and Health
- Architecture and Patient Manageability
- Architecture for Patient Comprehensibility
- Architecture for Patient Meaningfulness
- Discussion
- Challenges for the Future
- References
References
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- Antonovsky, A. (1996). The salutogenic model as a theory to guide health promotion. Health Promotion International, 11(1), 11.
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- Beauchemin, K. M., & Hays, P. (1996). Sunny hospital rooms expedite recovery from severe and refractory depressions. Journal of Affective Disorders, 40, 49–51. - PubMed
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