Class Central is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

FutureLearn

Dementia Inclusive Hospitals from a Universal Design Approach

Trinity College Dublin via FutureLearn

Overview

Prepare for a new career with $100 off Coursera Plus
Gear up for jobs in high-demand fields: data analytics, digital marketing, and more.

Make your hospital design as accessible and dementia-friendly as possible

Universal design involves creating a built environment that is accessible to all, regardless of age, disability, or other factors. Applying these principles to hospital design, to ensure proper care for individuals with dementia, presents unique challenges.

This three-week course from Trinity College Dublin will equip you with all you need to know about dementia-friendly hospital design. By the end, you’ll be ready to create spaces that foster excellent quality of life.

Apply universal principles to every aspect of hospital design

This course starts with an overview of the principles that should be applied to a built environment intended for dementia care before looking at detailed guidance for specific areas of a hospital.

You’ll also learn more about dementia symptoms, related impairments, and how these impact the way someone experiences a care setting. With these insights. you’ll make better design decisions.

Explore key universal design issues

As the course progresses you’ll look more closely at the design issues that have the most impact on dementia care, including hospital layout and scale.

You’ll see that collaborating with people who have dementia is absolutely imperative, and you’ll be guided on creating helpful environments in key areas across a hospital.

Learn from universal and hospital design experts

This course is based on the Dementia Friendly Hospitals from a Universal Design Approach – Design Guidelines 2018, which were written by Trinity College Dublin and other stakeholders, and co-authored by the lead educator of this course.

With such a strong understanding of how the built environment affects dementia symptoms, you can trust the College to deliver material that will engage and show you how to make a real difference in people’s lives.

This course is designed for hospital groups, architects, design professionals, patient advocates, advisory groups, and anyone else interested in improving dementia care through universal design. No prior experience or qualifications are required.

Syllabus

  • Introduction to dementia inclusive hospital design
    • Welcome to the course
    • Thinking about the built environment and its impact on people in hospitals
    • Designing for people living with dementia in the acute hospital environment
    • Universal design: Creating naturally supportive environments
    • Guidance regarding design consultation and participation with key stakeholders
    • Key design issues for people with dementia in acute settings
    • At a Glance—Universal Design Dementia Friendly Hospitals
    • Reflecting on the first week
  • Applying dementia inclusive design across the hospital
    • Introduction to week two
    • Levels of design and intervention
    • Applying a Universal Design Dementia Friendly Hospital approach across key spatial scales within a hospital campus
    • Section 1: The Hospital as a Whole
    • Section 2: Site Location, Approach and Entry
    • Section 3: Campus Design and Onsite Circulation
    • Section 4: Building Approach, Entry and Internal Circulation
    • Reflecting on the second week
  • Looking at key spaces and details
    • Refresher–Key Design Issues
    • Section 5: Key Internal and External Spaces
    • Section 6: Building Components: Materials, Fit-Out, and Signage
    • Section 7: Technology
    • Section 8: Internal Environment
    • Reflecting on the third week

Taught by

Nicole Fernandes

Reviews

4.7 rating at FutureLearn based on 3 ratings

Start your review of Dementia Inclusive Hospitals from a Universal Design Approach

Never Stop Learning.

Get personalized course recommendations, track subjects and courses with reminders, and more.

Someone learning on their laptop while sitting on the floor.