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Journal Article

Citation

Pragati S, Shanthi Priya R, Rajagopal P, Pradeepa C. Front. Eng. Built. Environ. 2022; 2(1): 34-42.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/FEBE-09-2021-0043

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has been reported to have a major impact on the mental health of an individual. Healing the mental stress, anxiety, depression and insomnia of an individual's immediate surroundings play a major role. Therefore, this study reviews how the built environment impacts the healing of an individual's state of mind.

DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH Various works of literature on healing environments were analysed to create frameworks that can facilitate psychological healing through architectural elements. Articles were selected from various journals like SAGE, PubMed, Journal of Applied and Computational Mechanics (JACM), Routledge Taylor and Francis, Journal of Contemporary Urban Affairs (JCUA), ScienceDirect, and Emerald databases, news articles, official web pages, and magazines that have been referred.

FINDINGS Indicators (spatial, sensory comfort, safety, security, privacy and social comfort) are linked to sub-indicators (access, distractions and views) and design characteristics (indoor climate, interior view, outside view, privacy, communication, noise, daylighting, temperature) which help in better connection of the built environment with individual's mental health. From the above indicators, sub-indicators and design characteristics, the authors have come to a conclusion that a view to the outside with better social interaction has an in-depth effect on an individual's mental health. Research limitations/implications This study predominantly talks about healing in hospitals but quarantining of COVID-19 patients happens in residences too. So, it is important to find the healing characteristics in residences and in which typology the recovery process is high.

ORIGINALITY/VALUE This paper has been written completely by the author and the co-authors and has not been copied from any other sources.


Language: en

Keywords

Built environment; COVID-19; Depression; Healing; Healthcare; Home; Mental health; Mental stress

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