Meeting the emergency management requirement

Each of the six EM areas should be broken down to identify single-point-of-failure items and critical consumable resources


The Joint Commission’s Element of Performance (EP) 3 within standard EM.02.01.01 reads, “The Emergency Operations Plan" identifies the hospital’s capabilities and establishes response procedures for when the hospital cannot be supported by the local community in the hospital’s efforts to provide communications, resources and assets, security and safety, staff, utilities, or patient care for at least 96 hours.

The expectation is that hospitals break down each of the six emergency management (EM) resource areas to identify immediate loss of capability consequences and consequences that arise as resources on hand are depleted, according to an article on the FacilityCare website.

Single points of failure can be difficult to identify because hospitals have many redundancies built into the infrastructure of the building and serving the building from municipal sources. 

The key is to assume the community infrastructure is destroyed. When an organization assumes it is a true island, the single points of failure become more obvious, the article said. 

Read the article.

 



September 28, 2015


Topic Area: Safety


Recent Posts

How Architects Shape the Future of Healthcare Facilities

Healthcare architecture is more than just designing and building hospitals.


UNC Health, Duke Health Form Partnership for Stand-alone Children's Hospital

The partners plan to break ground together on the new NC Children’s campus by 2027.


Sarasota Memorial Hospital Plans to Build New Facility in North Port

The six-story, 100-bed hospital is slated to open in fall of 2028.


CMMS, Data and the Path to Compliance

Taking control of healthcare facilities data in CMMS enables managers to use it to ensure the efficient operation and maintenance of their assets.


Healthcare is a Major Ransomware Target

Healthcare is the third-most-targeted sector, according to the report.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

 
 
 
 

Healthcare Facilities Today membership includes free email newsletters from our facility-industry brands.

Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Posts

Copyright © 2023 TradePress. All rights reserved.