false
OasisLMS
Login
Catalog
Beyond the Spreadsheet: How to Conduct a Realistic ...
Hazard Assessment Presentation With Detailed Notes ...
Hazard Assessment Presentation With Detailed Notes
Back to course
Pdf Summary
The document explains that a Hazard Vulnerability Assessment (HVA) is not just an annual compliance worksheet, but a core emergency management process that helps hospitals identify likely hazards, assess their impact, and honestly evaluate preparedness gaps. A strong HVA should shape emergency operations plans, training, exercises, mitigation projects, staffing discussions, equipment purchases, and leadership priorities.<br /><br />Key themes include:<br />- Build the HVA with a diverse committee representing nursing, facilities, safety, security, IT, supply chain, legal, leadership, and an executive sponsor.<br />- Use a healthcare-appropriate risk tool that considers likelihood, impact, preparedness, response, and recovery—not just scoring.<br />- Base the HVA on evidence, not memory alone, using internal data such as incident reports, downtime events, after-action reports, and utility failures, plus external sources like emergency management plans, public health data, coalitions, and utility partners.<br /><br />The presentation organizes hazards into major categories:<br />- Natural hazards: weather and environmental events like hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, heat, wildfires, earthquakes.<br />- Human-caused hazards: workplace violence, active assailants, protests, bomb threats, crashes, mass casualty incidents, cyber incidents.<br />- Technological hazards: power, communications, HVAC, water, generator, EHR, medical gas, and cybersecurity failures.<br />- Hazardous materials: internal or nearby chemical, fuel, gas, or contamination events.<br />- Emerging infectious diseases: outbreaks that affect staffing, PPE, isolation, visitor flow, and operations.<br /><br />For each hazard, the HVA should examine effects on patients, staffing, utilities, access, security, supplies, continuity of operations, and recovery. Preparedness should also be judged across plans, training, exercises, backup systems, internal/external response capability, mutual aid, and recovery.<br /><br />The process should end with practical prioritization: immediate action, monitor and improve, or maintain readiness. Most importantly, the HVA should be treated as a living document that is updated after exercises, incidents, and changing risks.
Keywords
Hazard Vulnerability Assessment
Emergency Management
Hospital Preparedness
Risk Assessment
Natural Hazards
Human-Caused Hazards
Technological Failures
Hazardous Materials
Infectious Diseases
Emergency Operations Plan
×
Please select your language
1
English