Sustainability, Infection Prevention, Evidence-Based Design Among Trends in $41 Billion Healthcare Construction Industry

May 10, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The $41 billion healthcare construction industry is going green as it anticipates growing 11 percent in 2007, according to a Health Technology Center (HealthTech) study. HealthTech reports that sustainability principles are lowering energy costs, creating environments less prone to the spread of infection, and reducing the carbon footprint of health facilities. U.S. hospitals are discovering that sustainable design practices not only reduce energy costs, but lower infection rates, according to the study. Technologies – such as motion sensors for lights, faucets, and doorways – reduce the transmission of infections as well as lowering the $5.3 billion spent annually on energy. “The high cost of energy and operations, coupled with increasing environmental consciousness, has elevated the importance of green design for healthcare facilities,” said Molly J. Coye, MD, CEO of HealthTech. “Green technology investment has become cost-effective and pays for itself within a few years.” Principles that reduce hospital acquired infection rates and manage the prevalence of multi-drug resistant organisms is another critical trend in healthcare facility design. Wireless communications, RFID tracking, anti-microbial surfaces, negative pressure isolation rooms, single patient rooms, and emergency department entrance alternatives are used to reduce infections, which claim up to 100,000 lives every year. Another trend is the use of evidence-based design to assure that facilities support clinical efficiency, patient safety, and deployment of emerging information and clinical technologies.

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