UK Hospital opens first rooftop critical care garden for ICU patients
London- Turning the "unimaginable" into reality, King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust has opened a 'Critical Care Garden' on its roof, offering some of the country's most critically ill patients access to life-saving treatment amidst greenery, sunlight, and fresh air.
The initiative has been described as the United Kingdom's first fully functional 'outdoor intensive care ward.' It is a step that, rather than resembling a traditional hospital project, feels more like an experiment in the future of healthcare.
Located on the uppermost floor of the hospital's Critical Care Centre, the brand-new unit comprises a total of 60 beds. The concept behind this innovative ICU is to position state-of-the-art medical equipment outdoors, thereby enabling patients, even those on ventilators or life support, to breathe fresh air without being deprived of any medical care.
As per the TOI media report, renowned landscape architect Nigel Dunnett and award-winning garden designer Sarah Price collaborated on this project, creating a space filled with aromatic herbs, such as rosemary, sage, and oregano, along with native plants and tactile species like 'Lamb's Ear'.
The innovative ICU was funded through two million pounds raised by the King's College Hospital Charity. Medical teams will conduct further studies to determine whether fresh air and natural daylight truly accelerate the pace of recovery, or if they simply make the ICU a less stressful environment for everyone involved.
Meanwhile, Dr Tom Best, Head of Critical Care at King's, says that patients admitted to regular intensive care may experience a variety of strange symptoms after being confined for a prolonged period—such as hallucinations, agitation, and outright delirium.
King's Critical Care Centre is already one of the largest centres in the UK, treating over 5,000 patients annually. Now, doctors believe that this roof could serve as a model that the entire world could adopt. While hospitals are making massive investments in robotics and AI, Kings believes that sunlight and fresh air can be just as effective.
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