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The Recovery Lounge by Priestmangoode

London industrial designers Priestmangoode propose hospital wards modelled on health spas and beds like those in first class airline cabins in a new manifesto for health service design, released today.

The report, written by Priestmangoode and called The Health Manifesto, looks at how better design could help produce better, more efficient and more cost-effective environments for patient recovery.

One of the ideas is the Recovery Lounge, a ward where people can recover from minor operations (shown here) that borrows ideas from the hotel and airline industries.

A PDF version of The Health Manifesto can be downloaded here.

Update 17/05/10: watch a movie about the project here.

Here's some text from Priestmangoode:


It may look more like a health spa but this sophisticated lounge could be the future of our hospital wards according to Priestmangoode.

In the week that the group won two major awards for their work reinventing the economy hotel room and designing luxury First Class airline cabins, its vision for a hospital recovery room uses the same design principles to create a concept which Priestmangoode believes could take the strain off the queues for hospital beds and help the NHS save money.

The Priestmangoode Recovery Lounge is a concept for patients recovering from minor operations and procedures.  The designers say that its clever design could help speed up patient turnaround times, improve cleanliness, take the strain off over-stretched nursing staff and ultimately help hospitals run faster and more effectively.

Key features of the room include:

The Recovery Lounge is part of a manifesto published this week by Priestmangoode which aims to show how clever design thinking could address some of the most pressing issues within the NHS.

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