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I would ask the nurse in question what is the intended use for the frig? Unless that frig is tied to a medication dispensing system in the patient room not sure that meds would be permitted in a stand alone frig in a patient room that was not controlled by pharmacy/nursing. Even then, you would not need anything as large as an undercounter frig. Additionally facility policy and procedures will most likely not permit the sharing the frig for any other use. If the intended use is for holding breast milk for a single patient a cube frig shold be sufficent for that function. If controlling sound as well as looks are legitimate concerns you may want to consider just placing the cube frig inside a cabinet behind a door in the room that family have access to. You should be able to design a cabinet detail to deal with whatever venting situation you have. Further when the frig needs to be replaced in the future you wont have to worry about somone in the purchasing department buying a different frig that conflicts with look, fucntion etc. Limiting the size of the frig will also help prevent the frig for being used for other unintended purposes. How many rooms are they doing? Each one of those refirgetators will need to be monitored daily for temps (BTW the nurse will need to do that), or they can get a self monitoring frig if budget is no option. Additionally that frig will need to be cleaned and disinfected after each paitent stay which will add to room turnaround time. ------------------------------------------- Americo Crincoli AIA Director of Planning Barnabas Health West Orange NJ -------------------------------------------
Show Original Message
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 06-13-2012 09:11 From: Pamela Deatherage Subject: Refrigerators in Single Patient NICU Rooms
------------------------------------------- Pamela Deatherage AIA Kinslow, Keith & Todd, Inc. Tulsa OK ------------------------------------------- Neonatal ICU's need a refrigerator for medicinces and breast milk storage. a small under-counter or smaller regrigerator is not for snacks and drinks.
I've had the same problem, though, on all my projects, finding an undercounter refrigerator that fits under the 34" high counter and doesn't cost 10 times a normal UC Ref.
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 06-12-2012 09:56 From: Russell Redman Subject: Refrigerators in Single Patient NICU Rooms
Quiet in a NICU is a beatiful thing. In my opinion you are doing the right thing with single patient rooms.
At 2:00 am in the morning there is no such thing as a "quiet refrigerator". I suggest you do not put a refrigerator in the room. No matter how quiet it is you will hear it. Also it will generate unwanted dust and become a magnet for dust just like the one in your kitchen does. The small inconvience of having to go out of the room for refreshment is offset by the benefits of not having the refrigerator in the room.
------------------------------------------- Russell Redman AIA Pope Architects, Inc. Saint Paul MN -------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 06-11-2012 14:57 From: Tammy Smith Subject: Refrigerators in Single Patient NICU Rooms
The following is a question from a NICU nurse. Please reply with your recommendations.
In our new NICU addition (which will include single patient rooms), we would like to include an under-counter refrigerator in each room. Can anyone recommend an attractive hospital-grade model, with a vent in the front, that is relatively quiet? If so, it would be great to know what facility is currently using the model that you recommend and how they are working so far. ------------------------------------------- Tammy Smith Volunteer Institute For Patient-centered Design, Inc. Atlanta GA -------------------------------------------
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