Designing LTC Physical Work Environments to Support Worker Well-being: A Review and Recommendations

Well-designed, health-promoting physical work environments have the potential to reduce burnout and attrition for employees who work in long-term care (LTC) facilities. Unfortunately, there is limited existing guidance for LTC facility owners and operators related to specific health-promoting design...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Medical Directors Association 2025-01, Vol.26 (1), p.105326, Article 105326
Hauptverfasser: Goldman, Cedra M., Rider, Traci R., Fisher, Gwenith G., Loder, Angela L., Schwatka, Natalie V., Van Dyke, Mike V.
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 105326
container_title Journal of the American Medical Directors Association
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creator Goldman, Cedra M.
Rider, Traci R.
Fisher, Gwenith G.
Loder, Angela L.
Schwatka, Natalie V.
Van Dyke, Mike V.
description Well-designed, health-promoting physical work environments have the potential to reduce burnout and attrition for employees who work in long-term care (LTC) facilities. Unfortunately, there is limited existing guidance for LTC facility owners and operators related to specific health-promoting design strategies for LTC work environments. This narrative review aims to fill this knowledge gap. Information was synthesized from healthy-building certification standards for health care and non–health care buildings, LTC design guidelines, academic studies, and expert commentaries. The review was conducted in 3 phases to (1) identify specific space types and design characteristics generally considered to be health-supportive, (2) gather existing research on the identified strategies to critically analyze their supportive value, and (3) communicate the findings to a broad audience of stakeholders. Five specific space types and 21 design characteristics were identified as both supportive of employee health and well-being, and relevant to LTC physical work environments. When health care organizations construct new facilities or renovate existing facilities, using these health-promoting design strategies should be considered. Benefits of health-promoting physical work environments include better employee mental and physical health, less burnout, and less turnover. Reducing burnout and increasing employee retention is essential to mitigate the ongoing staffing crisis in the LTC industry.
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subjects built environment
burnout
Burnout, Professional - prevention & control
employee well-being
Facility Design and Construction
Health Promotion - methods
Humans
Long-Term Care
Occupational Health
restorative design
Working Conditions
Workplace - psychology
workplace design
title Designing LTC Physical Work Environments to Support Worker Well-being: A Review and Recommendations
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