A few times you've clicked regular hospitalisation rather than Isolation, so your infectious disease patients aren't using the isolation units. 26:50 for example
You are going to need a huge number of isolation rooms when the infectious disease events come into play as I had far more isolation beds than regular beds and still didn't have enough
Haven’t watched yet, sitting at work, but just want to say I can’t wait to see this! I’ve never used the infectious disease DLC, looking forward to giving it a go!
See you in a little bit 😁😇 Great episode for the morning coffee. I'm glad you changed your decision reg Cardiology. Never seen the INF before. In fact, I've found out, that besides your way of explaining things, one thing I've struggled with watching others is the painfully long decision process reg. layout of dep. and so on, you spare me for that and "are back in a little bit". I love that, since it makes it much more enjoyable to watch. Thank you for sharing in this way 🙏
In the earlier stages of the game, your levels of hospitalisation in each department will be a bit a bit volatile until you've got enough specialisms that the total number of admissions evens out more across them. Best option is to leave yourself a lot of extra space in your wards when you plan them so that you can add/remove resources as various departments expand/get added. Your initial instinct will be to keep things as tight as possible to save space/money but it makes it a lot easier if you over-plan and over-resource (space-wise) first. Space is a sunk cost anyway so having a larger ward than you need wont cost you more in the long term, and you can always add/redeploy staff as you need to keep the running costs down. Hope that makes sense. Real life example - when the Royal London hospital was rebuilt, they left the 15th and 16th floors completely empty for years as they didn't need them (and couldn't afford to fit them out). In 2020 they fitted out both floors as Covid ICUs to manage admissions (i believe it was briefly the largest ICU in they UK at the time). Also your wards really should have windows to the outside where possible!
A few times you've clicked regular hospitalisation rather than Isolation, so your infectious disease patients aren't using the isolation units. 26:50 for example
pls god, put the walls in the corridor!!! its high contagious corridor without walls!!! maybe the game doesn't care but it looks scary
You are going to need a huge number of isolation rooms when the infectious disease events come into play as I had far more isolation beds than regular beds and still didn't have enough
Haven’t watched yet, sitting at work, but just want to say I can’t wait to see this! I’ve never used the infectious disease DLC, looking forward to giving it a go!
See you in a little bit 😁😇 Great episode for the morning coffee. I'm glad you changed your decision reg Cardiology. Never seen the INF before. In fact, I've found out, that besides your way of explaining things, one thing I've struggled with watching others is the painfully long decision process reg. layout of dep. and so on, you spare me for that and "are back in a little bit". I love that, since it makes it much more enjoyable to watch. Thank you for sharing in this way 🙏
In the earlier stages of the game, your levels of hospitalisation in each department will be a bit a bit volatile until you've got enough specialisms that the total number of admissions evens out more across them. Best option is to leave yourself a lot of extra space in your wards when you plan them so that you can add/remove resources as various departments expand/get added. Your initial instinct will be to keep things as tight as possible to save space/money but it makes it a lot easier if you over-plan and over-resource (space-wise) first. Space is a sunk cost anyway so having a larger ward than you need wont cost you more in the long term, and you can always add/redeploy staff as you need to keep the running costs down. Hope that makes sense.
Real life example - when the Royal London hospital was rebuilt, they left the 15th and 16th floors completely empty for years as they didn't need them (and couldn't afford to fit them out). In 2020 they fitted out both floors as Covid ICUs to manage admissions (i believe it was briefly the largest ICU in they UK at the time).
Also your wards really should have windows to the outside where possible!
I think you should go for internal medicine next :)
Looks like your orthopedic may potentially be being blocked off by the infectious disease floor restrictions.
moreeeeeeeeee episodes hehehe!!!