Dataset for "Thermal environment perceptions from longitudinal study of indoor temperature profiles in inpatient wards"

This research investigated the indoor air temperature and relative humidity profiles for 18 patient rooms in surgical, medical, cardiology and oncology wards in two hospitals. Also, 522 patient thermal surveys were completed in parallel with the monitoring task. The monitoring covered the hottest summer months; June, July, August, September in 2018 in Saudi Arabia. The selected hospitals were (i) the International Medical Centre (IMC), Jeddah and (ii) King Abdullah Medical City (KAMC), Makkah.

Keywords:
indoor temperature profiles, relative humidity, thermal comfort, hospital, temperature peaks
Subjects:
Civil engineering and built environment
Design

Cite this dataset as:
Alotaibi, B., 2020. Dataset for "Thermal environment perceptions from longitudinal study of indoor temperature profiles in inpatient wards". Bath: University of Bath Research Data Archive. Available from: https://doi.org/10.15125/BATH-00869.

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Data

Indoor_temperature … inpatients.xlsx
application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet (2MB)
Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

This dataset holds monitoring of indoor air temperature and relative humidity profiles for 18 patient rooms in surgical, medical, cardiology and oncology wards in two hospitals. Also, 522 patient thermal surveys were completed in parallel with the monitoring task to assess thermal sensation votes (TSV) and thermal preference votes (TPV). length of stay and admission rates in the last five years obtained as well.

Creators

Badr Alotaibi
University of Bath

Contributors

Stephen Lo
Supervisor
University of Bath

University of Bath
Rights Holder

Documentation

Data collection method:

Longitudinal monitoring of indoor temperature and relative humidity was conducted over an extended period of time. Thermal comfort surveys were administrated to inpatients.

Technical details and requirements:

18 Raspberry Pi+3 dataloggers were mounted in 18 patient rooms across the two hospitals. Each datalogger has two sensors; a probe wire for temperature and a tiny sensor for humidity. Readings were transferred off the dataloggers every two weeks during site visits.

Funders

Saudi Arabia Cultural Bureau in London
https://doi.org/10.13039/100012363

Grant
NJU162

Publication details

Publication date: 21 July 2020
by: University of Bath

Version: 1

DOI: https://doi.org/10.15125/BATH-00869

URL for this record: https://researchdata.bath.ac.uk/id/eprint/869

Related papers and books

Alotaibi, B., and Lo, S., 2020. Thermal Environment Perceptions from a Longitudinal Study of Indoor Temperature Profiles in Inpatient Wards. Buildings, 10(8), 136. Available from: https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings10080136.

Contact information

Please contact the Research Data Service in the first instance for all matters concerning this item.

Contact person: Badr Alotaibi

Departments:

Faculty of Engineering & Design
Architecture & Civil Engineering

Research Centres & Institutes
Centre for Energy and the Design of Environments (EDEn)