Enhancing patient experience is a goal of any good hospital--certainly close in ranking to providing excellent care--and the correct hospital sign system is a key component of achieving it.
Wayfinding, the systematic approach to guiding visitors and workers through a facility, relies on signs and other visual clues to provide the most efficient method of directing traffic and action. Hospital wayfinding is an excellent example of why durable, clear signage that speaks to both employees and visitors is necessary; when minutes matter, clear direction is non-negotiable. The addition of new wings, expansion or change in location of a department, these are all common occurrences for growing hospitals, and your hospital's sign system needs to expand-and evolve--as it does.
One study looked at five variables involved in hospital wayfinding and the effect that three different hospital sign system designs had on them. One group's signs used color and clear graphics and showed significantly better outcomes which EEG monitoring attributed to neural signals involving those factors. (The other groups' signage was a standard system, and a color-enhanced only one, respectively.) What were the results?
The biggest takeaway was an increased likelihood of correct initial decision making. The color and graphics group looked at the signs longer but made the correct decision about the direction they were traveling more frequently than the other groups. Even if the misreading of a sign in hospital wayfinding only causes a detour of a few minutes (something the study showed with the other groups), the psychological effect of that feeling of confusion can hinder the patient experience. The evidence suggests that including graphics with color and words causes the brain to engage for a slightly longer period but provides better information. When moments matter, that's valuable.
Another study found that during an emergency, reliance on sight clues is heightened, bolstering the need for vibrant, clear graphics and color use in a hospital wayfinding system.
Hospital wayfinding addresses numerous people that can be categorized into three main groups. Each has their own unique reasons for needing direction, and each has factors influencing why the hospital sign system guiding them needs to be clear and understood quickly.
If it isn't broken, why fix it? In some cases, you may not realize your hospital wayfinding system isn't helpful unless complaints or mistakes begin to pile up. If research about productivity isn't conducted, bad results aren't discovered. Even if there aren't any glitches in your current operations, there are good reasons to update.
If you're evaluating your hospital wayfinding system you want to ensure that you acquire the means to produce your own signage and floor markings, and use the highest quality materials and software, allowing for individualization and changes in need. Visit our library of articles, webinars, and other resources to find information on the types of wayfinding signs, as well as other hospital safety labeling guidance.