The Architecture of Healing
What does healthcare feel like from the perspective of the birth partner? In this deeply personal episode of The Architecture of Healing, Adrian Erdman flips the script and interviews host Chase Miller about his experiences navigating childbirth alongside his wife through three high-risk pregnancies. Together, they unpack the emotional, operational, and environmental realities of maternity care, from emergency C-sections and preeclampsia to communication breakdowns, caregiver advocacy, and the hidden impact of healthcare design on families. Chase shares vulnerable reflections on helplessness, stress, advocacy, and the role of the birth partner within complex clinical environments. The conversation explores how operational workflows, room layouts, staff communication, and healthcare systems directly shape patient and family experiences, and why empathy-centered design matters more than ever. This episode offers valuable insights for healthcare leaders, architects, clinicians, designers, and anyone interested in creating more resilient and human-centered care environments. Key Takeaways * The birth partner often becomes an advocate, translator, and emotional support system during labor and delivery. * Operational breakdowns and communication gaps can significantly increase stress for patients and families. * Healthcare environments can either reduce or amplify emotional and cognitive overload. * Designing for resilience means accounting for atypical patient needs not just standard workflows. * Staff burnout and operational pressures directly affect patient experiences. * Family-centered maternity spaces should consider the needs of partners, siblings, and support systems. * Trust and continuity of care can outweigh difficult healthcare experiences when outcomes and relationships are meaningful. * Empathy-driven design requires thinking beyond efficiency to understand the emotional impact of healthcare spaces. Why This Matters Birth experiences are among the most emotionally significant healthcare interactions people will ever have. Yet many healthcare systems and care environments are still designed primarily around operational efficiency rather than emotional resilience. This conversation highlights how healthcare design, workflows, communication systems, and staffing models affect not only clinical outcomes, but also the lived experiences of patients, partners, and families. By understanding these human experiences more deeply, healthcare leaders and designers can create spaces and systems that better support healing, dignity, trust, and connection. Resources & Mentions * Linchpin by Seth Godin - https://www.amazon.com/Linchpin-Are-Indispensable-Seth-Godin/dp/1591844096 [https://www.amazon.com/Linchpin-Are-Indispensable-Seth-Godin/dp/1591844096] * How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie - https://www.amazon.com/How-Win-Friends-Influence-People/dp/0671027034 [https://www.amazon.com/How-Win-Friends-Influence-People/dp/0671027034] Topics Discussed * IVF journeys * Preeclampsia & HELLP Syndrome * C-section experiences * Birth partner advocacy * Healthcare operations & workflow design * Human-centered healthcare environments * Cognitive overload in healthcare settings * Family-centered maternity care About the Guest Adrienne Erdman Adrienne Erdman is a healthcare designer and researcher focused on understanding how healthcare environments shape human experiences, emotions, and outcomes. Her work explores the intersection of design, operations, and empathy in healthcare spaces, with a particular emphasis on maternity care and human-centered environments. Connect with Adrienne Erdman: Adrienne Erdman LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adrienneerdman/] About the Podcast The Architecture of Healing explores how healthcare environments, operational systems, and human experiences intersect to shape healing. Through conversations with designers, clinicians, strategists, and healthcare leaders, the podcast examines how thoughtful design and empathy-driven decision-making can transform the future of care. Learn meore at: The Architecture of Healing [https://thearchitectureofhealing.com] Connect with host Chase Miller: Chase Miller LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chase-h-miller]
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