Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Intensive Care Unit Facility Design

Express Healthcare

|

Express Healthcare (Vol.11, No.4) April, 2017

Deepak Venkatesh Agarkhed, General Manager –Engineering,Facilities & Quality, Sakra World Hospital, gives an insight about certain parameters which should be followed while designing an ICU

Intensive Care Unit Facility Design

The intensive care unit(ICU), designated a sigh risk area from infection prevention point of view, has a concentration of lifesaving medical aid and nursing care for patients who are critically ill. The engineering controls both during design, commissioning and operation play a major role. The designer of an ICU should not only have insight of clinical work flow and protocol but have a sound knowledge of engineering controls. The design consultant should capture requirement of patients, intensivists, surgeon, nurses, technicians and infection control officer and in-house engineers (both general and clinical) for efficient design of ICU. The fine balancing act of quality, cost and time factors during design planning and execution will yield better results to hospitals on a long-term basis. Any flaws in ICU engineering control may result in serious compromise in patient care as evident from above mentioned examples.

The following facility related points are required to be considered as part of facility planning and further engineering controls during operation.

Space programme

The guidelines for ICU design should be based on criteria set by ISCCM, India given below.

Level I, six to eight beds — small district hospital, small private nursing homes, rural centres.

Level II, six to eight beds — larger general hospital

Level III, 10 to 16 beds-tertiary level hospitals

The new level III ICU are further planned based on type/usage of ICU i.e. general or speciality-based like medical, cardiac, neurosurgical, transplant, paediatric. The location of ICU should be close to the operation theatre, imaging diagnostic services and laboratory.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

From washing to sterilisation: Hidden design choices that shape daily CSSD realities

Presenting on 'From Washing to Sterilisation: Hidden Design Choices That Shape Daily CSSD Realities', Stinita Dsouza, Senior Marketing Specialist, Equitron Medica Private Limited, explained how smart, practical design decisions can significantly improve the day-to-day functioning of hospital CSSDs.

time to read

1 min

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Fireside chat on radiology

In the fireside chat on radiology, Dr (Lt Col) Priscilla Joshi, Professor and Head - Department of Radiodiagnosis and Vice Principal (PG), Bharati Vidyapeeth (DTU) Medical College and Vinay Chutake, Consultant - Medical Technology, Deenanath Mangeshkar Hospital, discussed what it truly means to build future-ready radiology services.

time to read

1 min

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

Innovation is now rooted in local realities

The 2026 ASCO Breakthrough meeting unites Asia-Pacific oncologists to advance cutting-edge research and collaboration. Dr Vanita Noronha, renowned oncologist at Tata Memorial Hospital (TMH), discusses innovations in cancer care and the importance of clinicians submitting research and participating in discussions at the event. Dr Noronha is also part of the ASCO Breakthrough Program Committee

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

Futuristic healthcare establishments: What to expect?

Speaking on 'Futuristic Healthcare Establishments: What to Expect?', Dr Meenakshi Deshpande, Senior Consulting Obstetrician, Gynaecologist, Medicolegal Expert and Vice President, IMA Maharashtra, outlined the major shifts shaping tomorrow's healthcare ecosystem.

time to read

1 min

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

Reimagining Indian MedTech: How Truevis is redefining imaging, innovation and self-reliance

Milind Deshpande, Joint Managing Director, Truevis Technologies, highlights how the company is driving a new era of India's diagnostic transformation through indigenous imaging systems, strategic global collaborations and a strong focus on accessibility and service reliability

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

Hytrel Film: The Next Frontier in Medical Polymer Innovation

The Shift from Conventional Polymers to Smart Elastomers For years, industries have relied on films made from rubber, PVC, or TPU. Each of these materials has benefits, but none could deliver the perfect balance of flexibility, toughness, chemical resistance, and recyclability. This challenge gave rise to Hytrel® films, made from thermoplastic polyester elastomers (TPEE).

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

Panel discussion: Evolving landscape of healthcare financing in India

In the panel discussion on 'Evolving Landscape of Healthcare Financing in India', Jyoti Prakash Mahapatra, CFO, Ruby Hall Clinic; Dr Rakesh Shah, COO, KEM Hospital; Kishore Chavan, Head - Central Purchase Department, Dr D.Y. Patil Medical College, Hospital and Research Centre; and Lt Col (Dr) Kushagra Patel (Retd), CEO, Raigad Hospital and Research Centre (Moderator) examined the financial realities shaping hospitals today.

time to read

1 min

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

How MeitY-NASSCOM CoE fuels Easiofy's AI-imaging leap

Easiofy, an AI-powered imaging platform, built by three women founders-Meenal Gupta, Noor Fatma and Sheetal Tarkas - and now deployed across resource- and radiologist-scare areas in India, is proof that deep-tech startups can solve real-world healthcare challenges, at scale, with ecosystem enablers like the MeitY-NASSCOM Centre of Excellence. From automated radiology workflows to neurosurgical triage tools, Easiofy's journey shows how CoE-supported innovation, steered by stalwarts like Sudhanshu Mittal, Head & Director, Technical Solutions, MeitY-NASSCOM CoE, is quietly reshaping India's healthcare infrastructure

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

HOME HEALTHCARE THE NEXT FRONTIER

As India faces rising chronic diseases, an ageing population, and growing demand for continuity of care, home healthcare is rapidly shifting from a peripheral service to a strategic extension of hospital care

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

Express Healthcare

Express Healthcare

We are building a rural eye-care workforce that can address avoidable blindness at scale

Dr Umang Mathur, CEO and Cornea Specialist, Dr Shroff's Charity Eye Hospital highlights the role of structured training, CSR collaboration, and workforce development in rural eye care in conversation with Neha Aathavale

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size