In the News
As reported by The Hartford Courant, June 22, 2007.
A Healing Hearth
By Theresa Sullivan Barger
Judy Potts is the kind of woman who counts her blessings -
blessings like Ken, her loving husband of 41 years, and being able
to dance at her son's wedding and play with her grandson.
Potts doesn't let her six-year struggle with ovarian cancer get
her down. But because of her illness, she retired early, and she
spends a lot of time in her Vernon home, especially in her living
room.
So she welcomed the chance for a free consultation from interior
redesigner Lisa Skelley as part of a program for women with ovarian
cancer offered by the national Interior Redesign Industry
Specialists organization.
Before she came, "There was something about the room that I was
not comfortable with. I didn't know what it was," Potts says. "Now I
love the room. Whether it made a difference health-wise, I don't
know. But I feel better in the room."
Research shows a link exists between one's environment and one's
outlook. Roger Ulrich, an architecture professor at Texas A&M
University who is an international expert in "evidence-based
design," concluded that hospital design influences patients and
found a link between the physical design of health-care facilities
and patient safety, stress levels, how well patients respond to
medical treatments and overall quality of care.
Colors can be soothing and buoying, or they can be depressing.
Details as simple as removing clutter and placing furniture
strategically can make a room more inviting and comfortable,
designers say.
In homes, hospices and health-care settings, there has been a
growing effort to create an uplifting environment for people who are
ill. Artwork, calming wall colors and careful furniture placement
promote good feelings.
For example, the University of Connecticut Health Center in
Farmington has more than 1,500 original works of art in its
collection, most of them donated, and the paintings, sculptures,
quilts, photographs and murals are displayed throughout the hospital
and clinics.
Seeing something of beauty is comforting in a time of stress,
particularly when someone is dealing with illness - their own, a
loved one's or a patient's, says Celeste LeWitt, a hospital
auxiliary volunteer who started collecting art for the hospital in
1979 and since has worked with a team of volunteers to manage the
collection.
When Farmington resident Ray Elling was recuperating from a
hip-replacement operation, there were times when he felt too weak to
read, he says. He appreciated the artwork in the waiting room and
hallways at UConn. What he enjoyed most, he says, was watching a
video on the TV in his room that showed each piece of the hospital's
artwork in leisurely sequence.
"It's quieting and restful," says Elling. "I think it makes a
difference."
At UConn's Neag Comprehensive Cancer Center, when patients face
Dr. Joel Levine at his desk, they see four floral watercolors by
artist Betty Kern on the wall behind him. More than half his
patients ask about the artwork in his office, Levine says, and
talking about the art allows doctor and patient to connect as
people.
"The purpose of the art is to pull you away from yourself," says
Levine, co-director of the Colon Cancer Prevention Program.
"Stress-reduction is not just a feel-good thing."
The Comprehensive Cancer Center at Rhode Island Hospital in
Providence completed a four-year redesign in 2005 aimed at promoting
wellness through a warm, inviting, cheerful environment, says Sandy
Stamoulis, who served as senior vice president for cancer services
and oversaw the work before retiring.
"Our mission was, when patients came, we knew we couldn't cure
everyone, but we sure as hell could care for them," the former chief
nurse says. Skeptics may dismiss the effort as a gimmick, but
Stamoulis says she has witnessed the effects first-hand and is glad
she delayed her retirement to finish the project.
"It was probably the best thing I ever did in my life. I lost a
sister to breast cancer. There were lots of times I would see her
sitting in the dark and being very depressed," she says. "It made me
very aware of how important it was to treat not just the physical,
but the emotional and spiritual."
In the radiation oncology clinic at the Comprehensive Cancer
Center, AquaVista 500 fish aquariums that are only 4-1/2 inches
thick hang on the wall in the waiting area like works of art.
Patients waiting for radiation treatments, and their families, sit
on benches across from the aquariums, watching the fish.
"It really seems to have a soothing effect," says Deborah
Crowell, the practice manager for the clinic's physicians' group.
"It's kind of relaxing."
Multiple studies back up her observations, showing that just five
minutes with real or simulated natural settings can lower stress,
lower blood pressure and lift people's spirits, reports Ulrich, the
architecture professor.
What works in hospitals works in homes, too, says Skelley, the
redesigner who helped Potts with her home. Your environment affects
your spirit, says Skelley, owner of LJS Interiors in Avon. Having
colors you like and good design doesn't have to mean making your
home look like a page from a magazine.
"People think decorating is about looking nice and spending a lot
of money," she says. "It doesn't have to be expensive. It has to be
about surrounding yourself with things that you love and things that
are meaningful to you."
Even before Skelley arrived to help, Potts had planned on
painting the living room a deep lavender that reminds her of a
sunset. Skelley suggested she buy some accent pillows in the same
hue for her couch.
Skelley also moved the furniture to cluster it closer together
and create a pathway from the entrance hall through the living room
into the adjoining dining room. That eliminated the need to maneuver
around furniture. Skelley also rearranged the chairs, grouped some
angels from Potts' collection atop the entertainment center and made
suggestions about accessories.
"It really made everything cozier and it really opened up the
room," Potts says. "I don't know if [the alterations] changed my
life, but they certainly have changed the feeling in the room.
Friends say the room is so warm and cozy." |