Optimizing Hospital Room Layout to Reduce the Risk of Patient Falls

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Abstract

Despite years of research into patient falls in hospital rooms, falls and related injuries remain a serious concern to patient safety. In this work, we formulate a gradient-free constrained optimization problem to generate and reconfigure the hospital room interior layout to minimize the risk of falls. We define a cost function built on a hospital room fall model that takes into account the supportive or hazardous effect of the patient’s surrounding objects, as well as simulated patient trajectories inside the room. We define a constraint set that ensures the functionality of the generated room layouts in addition to conforming to architectural guidelines. We solve this problem efficiently using a variant of simulated annealing. We present results for two real-world hospital room types and demonstrate a significant improvement of 18% on average in patient fall risk when compared with a traditional hospital room layout and 41% when compared with randomly generated layouts.

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Chaeibakhsh, S., Novin, R. S., Hermans, T., Merryweather, A., & Kuntz, A. (2021). Optimizing Hospital Room Layout to Reduce the Risk of Patient Falls. In International Conference on Operations Research and Enterprise Systems (pp. 36–48). Science and Technology Publications, Lda. https://doi.org/10.5220/0010226300360048

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