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CCPPP panel ponders COVID hospital responses and future pandemic plans

Warren Frey
CCPPP panel ponders COVID hospital responses and future pandemic plans

Four hospital procurement experts shared their experiences at the Canadian Council for Public-Private Partnerships virtual session titled, What Comes Next: How Will 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023鈥檚 Hospitals Adapt and Innovate after COVID-19?

The panel consisted of William Osler Health System executive vice-president Ann Ford, Plan Group executive vice-president Glen Landry and Johnson Controls business director for performance-based infrastructure 鈥 P3 Jean-Michel Read. The panel was moderated by Plenary Group head of asset delivery for social infrastructure Albert Iwasaki.

All of the panel participants agreed hospitals and other medical facilities faced unprecedented challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic and were required to adapt in ways they couldn鈥檛 have anticipated.

鈥淲e can all agree the pandemic has changed how we all use and view medical facilities and has also affected how we look at built space,鈥 Ford said.

Issues ranged from figuring outflow of staff and patients throughout buildings to finding administrative space for vaccination centres.

鈥淛ust with PPE requirements alone, we had lots coming in the door and didn鈥檛 have storage space for it, so we stored PPE in the halls and the parking lot,鈥 she added.

Read noted in some facilities areas were shut down as staff concentrated on COVID-19 patients but doing so resulted in more work for maintenance staff as toilets weren鈥檛 flushed and sliding doors fell into disuse.

Landry said working on new hospital projects during the pandemic also presented challenges.

鈥淢aterial costs were out of control and manufacturing delays we an unfortunate part of all this, sometimes up to 10 months and shipping costs rose up to 500 per cent,鈥 Landry said.

鈥淥n a positive note, we have been able to get through it and turn over world class smart hospitals as part of our contracts and I鈥檓 quite excited about that.鈥

Landry said Canadians have much to be proud of going forward in terms of public health infrastructure.

鈥淐anadians are a funny people. We鈥檙e way too modest. With the innovations in smart hospitals, we鈥檙e 15 years ahead of European hospitals,鈥 he said.

He noted this push for innovation began with the SARS pandemic and now 鈥渨e鈥檙e leading the world in automating clinical plans for better journeys for patients.鈥

He pointed to a Newfoundland hospital project where leveraging 3D models and mixed-reality lenses were used to allow designers and others in Toronto to 鈥渢our鈥 the building and its infrastructure.

鈥淏oth the field and the Toronto office can interact in collaborative ways on the hospital build. We have real time building progress and it鈥檚 a vehicle we wouldn鈥檛 have otherwise because of distance,鈥 Landry said.

The next evolution in technology and health care, he said, is 鈥渆xtension of all automated processes in hospitals and extending that into the homes they serve.鈥

Ford added BIM and REVIT have long-term benefits for those who will have to adapt to future crises.

鈥淏IM and REVIT are incredibly helpful over time because even 30 years later when we鈥檙e out of the project, someone鈥檚 going to need that information,鈥 she said.

 

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