Fire safety is one of the most high pressure and significant components of healthcare facility management. The reality is that there is no room for error; you must do everything in your power to keep your patients safe.
From 2007-2011, there were about 2,600 fires per year in nursing homes and 1,200 more in hospitals, the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) found. Those fires led to 140 injuries per year and three deaths — along with nearly $18 million in annual property damage.
The people inside these facilities — unlike a shopping mall, school, or sporting arena — are often sick, disabled, or elderly.
Facility managers must therefore be vigilant in keeping their patients safe. Luckily, attention to detail and routine safety checks can help to keep fires under control or prevent them altogether.
Here are five core strategies to ensure fire safety in your healthcare facility:
1. Monitor Your Kitchens, Especially During Meal Prep Times
The number one cause of healthcare facility fires is cooking equipment.
The NFPA’s last comprehensive survey across the industry (from 2006-2010) found that 61% of fires originated from equipment in the kitchen.
Unsurprisingly, a 2009 study by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) found that the peak times for fires lined up with the periods when kitchen staff prepared meals. One peak started around 8 a.m. with a second peak beginning at 4 p.m.
The good news is that these fires rarely left the kitchen, often contained to the appliance where the fire began.
What’s the best way to prevent cooking equipment from causing fires in your healthcare facility?
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) offers a few basic tips:
- Avoid grease fires by emptying appliances’ grease traps on a regular basis.
- Store any flammable liquids, oils, or other items far away from cooking equipment.
- Clean grills and grill ducts regularly to ensure that nothing that flammable can fall into cracks and gaps.
- Check all electrical cords for frays or tears.
- Keep portable fire extinguishers close by and ensure that your staff knows how to operate them.
In addition to routinely checking the kitchens, especially during meal prep times, make sure that your staff is fully aware of your facility’s fire safety plan. If fires do occur, employees need to be able to react calmly and quickly so that the fires do not spread beyond the kitchen.
2. Routinely Check Electrical Outlets and Wires
Cooking fires, despite occurring often, are usually confined to a single appliance or room. The same can’t be said for fires caused by electrical malfunctions.
FEMA found that one out of five non-confined fires (fires that spread beyond their point of origin) were the result of broken wiring or overloaded outlets. The report found that “general materials,” which includes the insulation that surrounds the electrical wiring, was the leading source of ignition for these fires.
As healthcare facility manager, your facility’s electrical setup therefore cannot be overlooked. Like kitchen fires, these electric fires can be avoided.
Many fire departments recommend avoiding the use of extension cords whenever possible. Instead of relying on a cord to connect an appliance to an outlet, move the appliance or install a new outlet. Think of the extension cord as a temporary solution, not a permanent one.
Cords that do need to be used must be in good condition and need to be away from flammable materials. Do not run a cord through a window, wall, or doorway — and do not put it underneath a carpet or rug.
If you’re stuck using cords, ask yourself the following questions on a regular basis:
- Are any cords split or cracked?
- Are any plugs in bad condition?
- Are any cords or plugs overloaded?
- Are cords in an area where they could be stepped on?
Multi-plug adaptors, which allow several appliances to be plugged into the same outlet, run the risk of overloading the outlet. Make sure that certified electricians are the only ones who are setting up, monitoring, and maintaining your facility’s electrical system.
3. Never Let Smoking and Oxygen Mix
Smoking in healthcare facilities is never a good idea, but this is especially true in close proximity of oxygen-dispensing equipment .
Earlier this year, a patient attempted to light a cigarette while receiving oxygen. She was treated for minor burns, and the fire was contained due to a quick response by the local fire department.
This is particularly dangerous because when there is more oxygen in the air, fires can burn easier, quicker, and hotter than usual, according to the NFPA.
Urge your staff to smoke cigarettes far away from oxygen sources . Smokers should also use “deep, non-tip ashtrays” to ensure that stray burning cigarettes don’t mix with oxygen-enriched air.
4. Train Your Staff to Operate and Inspect Portable Extinguishers
While automatic sprinklers and extinguishing systems are important, it’s better to combine these with manual, portable fire extinguishers. It is critical that your facility is equipped with the proper types of extinguishers to suit a variety of environments and hazards and that your staff knows how to use these extinguishers when needed. A recurring training program is a must.
Just as importantly, the extinguishers should be inspected each month to ensure they’re in working order. Try this series of routine procedures to visually inspect fire extinguishers:
- Are all extinguishers in the correct location?
- Are they easy to get to? Is anything blocking or obstructing them from view?
- Are any safety seals missing or broken?
- Are any of the extinguishers damaged on the outside?
- Are any of the nozzles leaking, corroded, or clogged?
- Are pressure gauge readings in proper position?
- Are the instructions easily seen and legible?
- Are the extinguishers full? (Test by lifting and/or manually weighing).
If any extinguishers fail the monthly visual inspection, address it immediately. In addition, be sure that you bring in a certified agency to perform more in-depth annual maintenance. The same company may be able to help if you find difficulty in handling your monthly inspections in-house.
5. Develop an Action Plan
Hospital facility managers must create and distribute a fire safety plan that details what to do in an emergency. All employees need to stay calm and be on the same page if a fire occurs.
Consider the RACE method, though there are many other techniques to choose from:
- Rescue any patients who are in danger
- Activate a fire alarm if you see a fire, or respond immediately when you hear an alarm
- Confine fires by closing off doors and hallways
- Extinguish small fires only; leave major fires for the fire department.
Facility managers must own this safety plan and ensure that all staff are trained and fully aware of their responsibilities. Regularly perform fire drills and review in meetings to keep this plan top of mind.
Fire safety in healthcare facilities requires vigilance and routine monitoring on the part of the facility management team. The seemingly monotonous practice of regularly checking cooking equipment, electrical wires, oxygen tanks, and fire extinguishing equipment can absolutely make the difference between life and death.