What's all that noise-Improving the hospital soundscape

J Clin Monit Comput. 2019 Aug;33(4):557-562. doi: 10.1007/s10877-018-0215-3. Epub 2018 Nov 2.

Abstract

Hospital noise levels regularly exceed those recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO). It is uncertain whether high noise levels have adverse effects on patient health. High levels of noise increase patient sleep loss, anxiety levels, length of hospital stay, and morbidity rates. Staff conversation and auditory medical alarms are amongst the leading noise producing stimuli, with combinations of stimuli accounting for much of the high noise levels. The Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey shows a slight improvement in overall hospital noise levels in the United States, indicating a minor reduction in noise levels. Alarm ambiguity, alarm masking and inefficient alarm design contributes to a large portion of sounds that exceed the environmental noise level in the hospital. Improving the hospital soundscape can begin by training staff in noise reduction, enforcing noise reduction programs, reworking alarm design and encouraging research to evaluate the relative effects of noise producing stimuli on the hospital soundscape.

Keywords: Alarms; Conversation; Design; Noise; Reduction; Stimuli.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Anxiety
  • Auditory Fatigue*
  • Auditory Perception
  • Auditory Threshold
  • Clinical Alarms*
  • Hearing
  • Hospitals / standards*
  • Humans
  • Intensive Care Units
  • Monitoring, Physiologic / instrumentation*
  • Noise* / adverse effects
  • Noise* / prevention & control
  • Patient Safety
  • Patients' Rooms / standards
  • Perceptual Masking
  • Quality Improvement
  • Sleep
  • United States