Not Found (#404) - StudentShare. https://studentshare.org/nursing/1860495-sustainable-nursing-healing-environment
Not Found (#404) - StudentShare. https://studentshare.org/nursing/1860495-sustainable-nursing-healing-environment.
Teaching nurses that artificial settings are a major cause of human sickness and environmental harm improves sustainability in healing environments. Healing environments that use energy control solutions contribute to a green sustainable setting for patients and nursing staff (Pereira and Silva E Souza, 2013). For instance, from my experience, healing environments that used Lutron’s light bulbs recorded better patient comfort, lower stress and nervousness, support for innate daily rhythms, and the personalization of optical settings by patients without depending on nurses. Clearly, the physical surrounding has an explicit effect on the healing procedure as it encourages more effective healing, leading to shorter admissions, quicker recovery, and better staff productivity (UCLA Extension, 2013).
Nurses who bear and employ knowledge about the contributions and consequences of artificial settings in healing environments contribute to natural surroundings. The ability to control the healing environment and natural surroundings add to a patient’s mental and physical attitude, rate of healing, and quality of admission. From my clinical experience, green energy solutions in a healing environment lowered wasted lighting and power expenses, lowered labor upkeep, and operation expenses, lowered landfill surplus, lowered greenhouse gas productions, optimized the active consumption of natural sunlight, and lowered electrical energy rates as well as drawbacks (mynursingdegree's channel, 2012).
Sustainable healing environments enhance the healthcare experience for nurses and patients. Healthcare experience for the caregiver is pivotal to the well-being of the patient (Sandhu, 2012). In such situations, the primary guideline for the planning of the physical, healing environment ought to support the efficiency and speed of the healing process. When a healing environment fosters a patient’s mood and perception, manipulating it in favor of him or her and the nurse is critical. As a result, designing patient rooms while considering these aspects of the healing process is essential (Olson and Keegan, 2007). Hospitals with patient rooms designed with sustainable methods and features report faster and more effective healing processes amongst their patients than hospitals with less green qualities.
In conclusion, understanding human health at physical and mental levels is crucial for nurses and designers of healing environments. Healing environments such as patient rooms with more natural sunlight or energy control solutions improve healing processes. This improvement occurs largely through changes in comfort, patient mood, and perceptions. Training nurses about artificial buildings in relation to human sickness and health is pivotal for working towards ultimate sustainability in healing environments.
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