Life Safety Deficiencies Top Joint Commission's Citation List
In a culmination of efforts to better review fire protection features in acute care facilities, Life Safety Code violations became the top cited standard in all surveyed hospitals in 2008, reports The Joint Commission.
According to the July 2009 Joint Commission Perspectives, 45% of surveyed hospitals received a citation for EC.5.20, the old 2008 standard for Life Safety Code compliance. That standard has since expanded into 10 life safety standards introduced in 2009.
The National Fire Protection Association publishes the Life Safety Code, while The Joint Commission and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services enforce the year-2000 edition of the document. EC.5.20's top ranking isn't a surprise to Brad Keyes, CHSP, life safety consultant for The Greeley Company, a division of HCPro in Marblehead, MA.
Life Safety Code violations are more prominent "not only due to the high emphasis The Joint Commission places on life safety, but also due to the general lack of understanding by facility managers of the code and the interpretations made by [The Joint Commission]," said Keyes, who is a former life safety specialist with the accreditor.
Life safety specialists, who have working knowledge of the Life Safety Code and often have experience as facilities professionals at hospitals, joined survey teams back in 2005.
The specialists tour the building from roof to basement, checking how well the facility complies with the various provisions in The Joint Commission's life safety standards and related Life Safety Code requirements.

- CMS Reveals Central Line Infection Rates, Finally
- Keeping Readmission Rates Low with Treatment Guidelines
- 5010 Logjam Means No Pay for Physicians
- Leading Change is Tough from the Back of a Limo
- Medicare Physician Payment Rule Factors in GPCI
- Feds Release Final Rules on Health Plan Language
- Getting to the Heart of Cardiology Alignment
- Engineering a High-Performance Emergency Department
- What to do with an empty hospital?
- Parkland Keeping Consultant's Analysis Under Wraps

