Healthy Patients, Workforce and Environment: Coupling Climate Adaptation and Mitigation to Wellbeing in Healthcare
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Hospital Operational Pressures, Built Environment and Local Climate
1.2. Indigenous Perspectives and Context
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Collection
2.2. Rationale for Site Selection
2.3. Species Selection
3. Results
3.1. Cooling Impacts
3.2. Biodiversity Impacts
3.2.1. Flora
3.2.2. Fauna
3.3. Stakeholder Engagement
3.4. Workforce Impacts
3.5. Wellbeing Impacts
3.6. Perspectives of Indigenous Patients and Visitors
3.7. Active Mobility Campaign Outcomes
4. Discussion
4.1. Benefits of Green Spaces in Health Campuses
4.2. Biophilic Design and Human Health
4.3. Organizational Benefits of Green Spaces
4.4. Benefits of Participation in Land Care Activities and Biodiversity Surveys
4.5. Promotion of Indigenous Cultural Values
5. Limitations
6. Future Directions
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Mean 3 p.m. Relative Humidity (%) | Mean 3 p.m. Temperature (°C) | Heat Stress Index (°C) | Heat Index Warning Level | |
---|---|---|---|---|
January | 70 | 30.2 | 35.5 | Extreme Caution |
February | 72 | 30 | 35.5 | Extreme Caution |
March | 67 | 30.5 | 35.5 | Extreme Caution |
April | 52 | 31.7 | 34.3 | Extreme Caution |
May | 43 | 31.2 | 31.7 | Caution |
June | 38 | 29.9 | 29.4 | Caution |
July | 37 | 29.6 | 28.9 | Caution |
August | 40 | 30.2 | 29.9 | Caution |
September | 47 | 31.2 | 32.4 | Extreme Caution |
October | 52 | 32 | 34.9 | Extreme Caution |
November | 58 | 31.9 | 36.3 | Extreme Caution |
December | 65 | 31.2 | 36.6 | Extreme Caution |
Appendix B
Appendix C
Scientific name (Common Name, Larrakia Language) | |
Acacia alleniana | Crotalaria retusa (rattlepod) |
Acacia auriculoformis (black wattle, Gwarlmarrwa) | Croton habrophyllus (atlas croton) |
Acacia difficilis (river wattle) | Cupaniopsis anacardioides (tuckeroo) |
Acacia dimidiata (swamp wattle) | Denhamia obscura |
Acacia dunnii (elephant ear wattle) | Dianella odorata (native flax lily) |
Acacia gonocarpa (cloud acacia) | Dodonaea platyptera (hop bush) |
Acacia hammondii | Erythrophleum chlorostachys (iron wood, Deleny-gwa) |
Acacia holosericea (silver wattle) | Erythrina vespertillo ssp. vespertillo (bats wing coral tree) |
Acacia latescens | Eucalyptus bigalerita (northern salmon gum) |
Acacia limbata | Eucalyptus brevifolia (northern white gum) |
Acacia multisiliqua | Eucalyptus herbertiana (Kalumburu gum) |
Acacia mountfordiae | Eucalyptus miniata (Darwin woollybutt, Maminyjuma) |
Acacia nuperimma | Eucalyptus phoenicea (scarlet gum) |
Acacia simsii | Eucalyptus tetrodonta (Darwin stringybark, Manugurrma) |
Acacia stigmatiphylia | Eucalyptus tintinnans (Hills salmon gum) |
Acacia tumida (pindan wattle) | Exocarpus latifolius (native cherry) |
Acacia umbellata | Ficus racemosa (cluster fig) |
Achrosticum speciosum (mangrove fern) | Ficus scobina (sandpaper fig) |
Adansonia gregorii (Boab) | Ficus virens (banyan, Galamarrma) |
Albemochus moschatus (native rosella) | Gardenia psidioides (Glennie River) * |
Albizia lebbeck (white sirus) | Fimbristylis dichotoma (Common Fringe-rush) |
Allosyncarpia ternata | Grevillea aurea |
Alloteropsis semialata (cockatoo grass) | Grevillea banksii |
Alphitonia excelsa (soap wood) | Grevillea decurrens |
Alstonia actinophylla (milkwood, Djandjag) | Grevillea dryandri |
Banksia dentata (NT banksia) | Grevillea dryandri var. dasycarpa |
Barringtonia acutangula (freshwater mangrove) | Grevillea formosa (Mount Brockman grevillea) |
Bossaea bossiaeoides (holly-leaved pea flower) | Grevillea heliosperma (rock grevillea) |
Brachychiton megaphyllus (red-flowering kurrajong) | Grevillea pteridifolia (fern-leaved grevillea) |
Breynia cernua (ironstone range) | Grevillea pteridifolia × G. sessilis (Sandra Gordon) * |
Bridelia tomentosa | Grevillea pteridifolia × G. banksia (Honey gem) * |
Buchanania arborescens (little gooseberry) | Grevillea parallela (silver grevillea) |
Buchanania obovata (green plum, Mawurrma) | Grewia oxyphylla |
Callistemon (Kings Park special) * | Heteropogon triticeus (giant spear grass, Maridlema) |
Callistemon viminalis | Hoya australis * |
Calophyllum inophyllum (beauty leaf) | Hibiscus tiliaceus (beach hibiscus, Lalwa) |
Calophyllum sil (beauty leaf) | Hibiscus tiliaceus var. rubra |
Calytrix extipulata (turkey bush, Deleny-gwa/Muyingag) | Ipmoea pes-caprae (beach morning glory) |
Canavalia rosea (beach bean) | Jacksonia dilatata |
Carallia brachiata (bush currant) | Leea novoguineensis (bandicoot berry) |
Carpentaria accuminata (carpentaria palm, Binbirrim-ba) | Leea rubra |
Casuarina equisetifolia (coastal sheoak) | Leptospermum madidum (weeping tea tree) |
Casuarina glauca (Cousin it) * | Licuala ramsayi * |
Celtis philippensis | Lomandra hystrix * |
Chrysopogon elongatus (tall tamil grass) | Lomandra longifolia (Verday) * |
Clerodendrum floribundum (lolly bush) | Lophostomon lactifluus |
Cochlospermum fraseri (yellow kapok) | Maranthes corymbosa (white cloud tree) |
Corymbia bella (ghost gum, Malngarrma) | Melaleuca dealbata (blue paperbark) |
Corymbia bleeseri (glossy-leaved bloodwood) | Melaleuca leucadendra (weeping paperbark, Gwayalwa) |
Corymbia jacobsiana (stringybark bloodwood) | Melaleuca viridiflora (broad leaved paperbark) |
Corymbia ptychocarpa (swamp bloodwood, Galanggwa) | Melastoma malabathricum (native lasiandra) |
Corymbia setosa (rough-leaved bloodwood) | Melicope elleryana |
Crotalaria cunninghamii (green birdflower) | Micromellum minutum |
Crotalaria novo-hollandiae (rattlepod) | Milletia pinnata (pongamia) |
Mimusops elengi | Terminalia microcarpa |
Morinda citrifolia (cheese fruit) | Terminalia platyphylla |
Murraya panniculata (mock orange) | Timonius timon |
Myristica insipida (native nutmeg) | Vitex glabrata (black plum, Moerrma) |
Nauclea orientalis (Leichardt tree) | Vitex rotundifolia |
Pandanus spiralis (pandanus, Biyamarrma) | Vitex trifolia |
Peltophorum pterocarpum (yellow flame tree) | Xanthostemon chrysanthus * |
Phalaeria macrocarpa (scented daphne) | Non-Australian native species |
Pittosporum moluccanum (atlas moth plant) | Scientific name (common name) |
Planchonia careya (cocky apple) | Adansonia digitata (African boab) |
Sesuvium portulacastrum (native portulaca) | Alocasia macrorrhiza (taro) |
Stenoclaena palustris (climbing swamp fern) | Begonia sp. |
Sophora tomentosa (Silver bush) | Bouganvillea sp. |
Sterculia quadrifida (native peanut, Dundil) | Bromeliad sp. |
Sterculia holtzeii | Canna sp. |
Syzygium armstrongii (small white bush apple) | Coleus amboinicus (Cuban oregano) |
Syzygium australe (Resilience) * | Costus woodsonii (red button ginger) |
Syzygium eucaluyptoides spp. Bleeseri | Ficus pumila (creeping fig) |
Syzygium fibrosum | Hibiscus sabdariffa (rosella) |
Syzygium forte sp. potamophilum (large white bush apple) | Petraeovitex wolfei (nong nooch vine) |
Syzygium suborbiculare (red bush apple, Mindilima) | Petrea volubilis (sandpaper vine) |
Syzygium suborbiculare (“Tiwi Pink” bush apple) | Piper auritum (Mexican pepperleaf) |
Templetonia hookeri | Pyrostegia ventusta (orange trumpet vine) |
Tephrosia rosea (silky rose) | Rhoeo sp. |
Terminalia arostrata (crocodile tree) | Tamarindus indica (tamarind) |
Terminalia catappa (indian almond) | |
Terminalia ferdinandiana (billy goat plum, Damiyumba) |
Appendix D
Scientific name (Common Name) |
Mental Health Banyan tree: |
Cacatua galerita (Sulphur-crested cockatoo) Conopophila albogularis (Rufous-banded honeyeater) |
Dicrurus bracteatus (Spangled drongo) |
Ducula spilorrhoa (Torresian imperial pigeon) Entomyzon cyanotis (Blue-faced honeyeater) Grallina cyanoleuca (Magpie-lark/pee wee) Lichmera indistincta (Brown honeyeater) |
Philemon buceroides (Helmeted friarbird) Philemon citreogularis (Little friarbird) |
Sycthrops novaehollandiae (Channel-billed cuckoo) |
Sphecotheres vieilloti (Australasian figbird) |
Other planting zones: Burhinus oedicnemus (Stone curlew) |
Dicrurus bracteatus (Spangled drongo) Erythrura gouldiae (Gouldian finch) Grallina cyanoleuca (Magpie-lark/pee wee) |
Pardalotus striatus (Striated pardalote) |
Stizoptera bichenovii (Double barred finch) Vanellus miles (Northern masked lapwing) |
Appendix E
RDH Campus Greening Volunteers [51] |
I am working in the Mental Health [MH] inpatient unit. I would love to share this with MH colleagues and perhaps extend the invite to any people who have recovered and would like to improve the feel of the MH unit surroundings. |
Hello you good things!! Wondering when the next working bee will be? Love what you’re doing and keen to get involved! |
Great work that is really changing the feel of RDH! Thanks to all the volunteers. |
Incredible work especially in this heat. Good job and thank you. The campus seriously looks so much nicer. |
I’m hoping that one day we will be able to harvest the leaves [of the ironwood plant] for our Smoking Ceremonies at RDH! Great job! All of the steps are really adding up now. |
Super Effort! Well done. |
I’ve loved watching [the hospital curlews] over the years. |
Great job, very inspiring and the impact of all this planting is so appreciated. Great to see all the local species being planted, very exciting times. |
Was lovely as always [to attend a working bee]—so many interesting people. Agreed! Was a morning well spent with good people. |
You guys are doing an amazing job! Thank you for all your hard work. |
Very hot work everyone. |
Great design with the planting. Great job volunteers. Great example of the natural infrastructure supporting and positively influencing man-made infrastructure. Many benefits, great vision and hard work. |
Thank you Eco-warriors! It is looking really very nice. We did a ride past on Sunday. Looks Fantastic! |
Fabulous work, and the rain has started! |
Such excellent work! |
Saw these little beauties [Gouldian finches] at Royal Darwin Hospital today. Fabulous!!! My son was asking the other day if they’d been spotted at RDH. Yay! How wonderful! So, we need some native seed grasses on campus! |
So many thanks to the crew for all of your hard work! |
Doing a great job guys cheers! |
Was a wee bit warm on Saturday morning, but sooo worthwhile when the trees give us cooling shade and habitats! |
Very epic! Nice work all. |
This is looking so good. Thanks to you and all your wonderful volunteers—I love it! |
Absolutely brilliant. Hope to contribute more this wet season. |
You’re doing a great job. Happy New Year. |
Great [media] coverage of a brilliant project driven by commitment and vision for a better world! |
I saw this section today in real life and it is so heartening! Future staff and visitors will benefit so much from this! |
Beautiful flower! |
A little friend [a frog] is supervising the mulching. Note the curlew [a native bird] is looking after an egg! Might be worth putting in a partition to keep the cars away from their nest. |
Looking good, thanks to all the volunteers. Fantastic job! |
It looks fab! Coming along so well. |
Magnificent collaboration! Will be part of the very special RDH Campus Greening Volunteers history! Good job! |
Great work team! Nice work! Wonderful! Such wonderful work. I was at RDH yesterday and appreciating the different ‘feel’ surrounding the building. |
Amazing! Visual and sensory amenity improving fast at RDH campus, can’t believe what I am seeing! Congratulations to all concerned! |
Beautiful! |
I saw this [Grevillea aurea] when walking up [the footpath] the other day—mine (at home) is about a foot and a half tall—this gives me hope!! Just beautiful!! |
Awesome work! |
These trees are looking spectacular. Could someone please tell me what they are? A type of acacia? Yay for this gorgeous Acacia umbellata! And today is national wattle [acacia] day! |
Lots of bird activity along the planted corridor (out to back carpark). Smells beautiful, sounds calming, feels cooler and a space shared with wildlife. |
Love this. Awesome. |
I am a frequent visitor to the [pathology laboratory] as part of my work and have appreciated the new grass and extra trees now planted in front. Makes everyone who works or visits the lab feel happy. |
Staff of Top End Health Service Facebook Group [52] |
Just so fantastic this greening project…all the crew involved are making such a difference to the RDH local environment. Hats off to you all. |
Well done! |
The [orange collared lorikeets] were quite the crowd pleasers today! |
Hyperbaric unit staff and patients appreciate the shady tables in the first pic thank you! |
Great initiative! |
This is great, thanks for all your hard work! |
Fantastic! |
This is awesome well done to all. I saw the bus load [of volunteers] and was wondering what was happening. Well done all involved. |
Great initiative! Hopefully your efforts will make RDH campus greener and less of a pavement paradise. Kudos to the crew and organizers. |
Looking good! |
This is really cool! We love you Doctors thank you for your hard work and commitment to your craft. Thank you for the knowledge you share and the guidance and direction you give, we massively appreciate you all. |
Great work team ED, my garden is always open to mulching whenever anyone needs another wellness lift. |
This is wonderful!!! RDH needs this & so good to see your greatest resource—staff!—being looked after. |
Great job! I am so impressed with all this movement at RDGH. Good on you ALL! |
I have some Aloe vera plants if you want them for anywhere. |
800 trees! That’s amazing. |
Amazing work well done to all involved, it’s so lovely to see walking around. |
Great work! More of this please. |
Love it! |
Awesome work well done. |
This is awesome!! |
I’m pleased the [banyan] tree isn’t being chopped down. |
We have some big pots we can donate. Hopefully we’re free for the next working bee too. |
Loved seeing all the new trees around. |
NT Field Naturalist’ Club Inc. [53] |
Having worked at RDH I find this a very positive move for staff and patients alike to be able to go out and sit in the natural surrounds and enjoy the shade of the trees and watch the birds. Thanks for your wonderful work. Excellent work. Thank you. How many of the 950 shrubs do you expect to be alive in 2 years’ time? |
[Plant ID request]: Mimosa pudica, perhaps Acacia farnesiana. Second [plant] looks live Clerodendrum, a native. I was impressed by the new native plantings at the hospital and hoping there would be more—particularly a healing/hanging-out garden nearer the main hospital. Are there any master plans or info on the web, if there are more plants on the horizon and was there a chance for visitor feedback? I have been out remote so may have missed it. Thanks and great work. I am a huge supporter. Plants and nature are at the core of healing! |
[Plant ID request]: Does it have an underground bulb [photo provided]? If it does, most likely to be Eulophia graminea, a terrible weed which reproduces very easily through both bulb and seed. Collect all the seeds first and bag them, safely dig out the bulbs without spreading this weed further. The bird life is just amazing in all the new growth, so good! That is awesome. Well done legends! |
[Plant ID request]: native Spermacoce leptoloba. |
[Plant ID request]: pupa and caterpillar of the large day-flying 4 O’clock moth (Dysphania numana). |
[Plant ID request]: looks like annual Mission grass, bag the seed heads to prevent spreading. |
[Plant ID request]: the plant you have there is Ipomoea quamoclit and the fruiting vine is Coccinia grandis, both exotic and invasive vines. |
[Response to suggestions for species to be planted in a retaining wall]: Portulaca should survive with no irrigation. With irrigation: pseuderanthemums…hemigraphis…resurrection ferns, Litchfield hoya. Should attract Danaid egg flies, brown soldier and blue Argus butterflies. |
Territory Native Plants Community [54] |
Love this! Keep it going. |
The other day I thought the grounds could do with some tender loving care. Well done everyone. By the was Palmerston Regional Hospital has fantastic gardens. |
Keen [to attend the next working bee]. |
Therapeutic Horticulture Australia [55] |
Love it, what a nice place to sit and have a break. |
Thanks for sharing these updates. |
Great stuff thanks for sharing! I’ll be in Darwin next month, wondering if you might have some recommendations for projects and places to visit while I’m there? I would love to [see the RDH project]! |
Wonderful work for a hugely deserving bunch! I have enormous gratitude to the staff of RDH, especially the Emergency Department, who helped me and my family through some challenging times. They are the best! |
Love this! Well done team! |
Appreciate it very much for sharing. Inspiring work done with the best success. |
This is brilliant. Such an energetic and happy crew [of volunteers]. |
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Planting Zone | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | |
PHASE 1 | ||||||||||||||||
PHASE 2 | ||||||||||||||||
PHASE 3 | ||||||||||||||||
Improved aesthetics | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
Exposed to climate/UHI effect | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | ||
Staff/patient request | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |||||
Pedestrian/cycling route | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |
Near building entrance | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | ||||
Near end of trip facility | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |||
Multi-agency staff access to area | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |||
Outdoor work area | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | ||||||||
Staff gathering place | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |||||||||
Patient/visitorgathering place | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | ||||||||
Potential newgathering place | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | |||||
Potential site forblue space | + | + | + | |||||||||||||
Prone to weeds (W)or soil erosion (S) | W | WS | WS | W | W | WS | WS | WS | W | WS | ||||||
Replace dead orweak plants | + | + | + | + | ||||||||||||
Requires new mainswater supply | + | + | + | + | + |
Professional and Community Group Representation | |
Community climate action group member | Hospital operations managers |
Community cycling advocate | Medical researchers |
Community members (health service consumers) | Medical students |
Emergency physician | Nephrologist |
Environmental officer | Paramedics |
Health librarians | Physiotherapists |
Hospital administration officers | Security officers |
Hospital facilities officers | University program manager |
Heat issues raised | |
Heat island effect from the large area of exposed carparks. | |
Unshaded bare ground and footpaths radiate heat to pedestrians. | |
Concern for impact of heat exposure on staff and patients with health and mobility issues. | |
Lack of shaded active mobility routes discourages participation in cycling, walking, E-scooter modes of transport to work. | |
Existing covered walkways only provide shade in the middle of the day (no eaves to block early and late sun) | |
Lack of seating infrastructure in areas marked as cool refuges. | |
Solutions offered by participants | |
Need urgent planting interventions to build resilience to warming climate (trees take time to grow). | |
Improved use of built infrastructure (covered walkways, include eaves to block early/late sun). | |
Consider campus journeys of staff, patients and visitors when designing cooling interventions. | |
Expand current shade infrastructure for walking and cycling. | |
Integrate greening in campus master-planning. |
Benefits of Landcare | Sub-Categories |
---|---|
Learning, awareness and practice change | Awareness raising Practice change Multigenerational reach Improved knowledge Scales of change Continuous learning |
Social: community health and wellbeing | Contact with natural environment Social networks Physical and mental health benefits |
Social: political and social capital | Partnerships and networks Leadership and public participation Governance and self-regulation Localism and empowerment Increasing the recognition of women in rural communities Personal growth Filling the void Increasing awareness, skills and knowledge |
Economic | Increased financial return Access to resources Training and management techniques |
Cultural | Connection with Country |
Resilience | Resilient people and resilient landscapes |
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© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
de Souza, M.; Lee, A.B.; Cook, S. Healthy Patients, Workforce and Environment: Coupling Climate Adaptation and Mitigation to Wellbeing in Healthcare. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 7059. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227059
de Souza M, Lee AB, Cook S. Healthy Patients, Workforce and Environment: Coupling Climate Adaptation and Mitigation to Wellbeing in Healthcare. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(22):7059. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227059
Chicago/Turabian Stylede Souza, Mark, Aunty Bilawara Lee, and Stephen Cook. 2023. "Healthy Patients, Workforce and Environment: Coupling Climate Adaptation and Mitigation to Wellbeing in Healthcare" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 22: 7059. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20227059