Recently, a relative of mine required surgery, which led to my spending long periods of time in a hospital. As a result of that experience, I developed the content of today’s blog: a list of nine ways we can make hospital BCM programs healthier.
Related on BCMMETRICS: How Hospitals Can Heal Their BCM Programs
They say that experience is the best teacher.
That was definitely true for me over the past few weeks when the illness of a close family member required me to spend long stretches of time in one of our city’s hospitals.
Over the years, I’ve visited scores of hospitals all over the country as a consultant coming in to help with business continuity management (BCM) planning.
But the whole subject gets a lot more personal when your loved one is in the vulnerable state of being a patient in that hospital. In that situation, their health and even their survival, potentially, depends on everything at that hospital functioning smoothly, no matter what.
As their relative, you sit there looking around the room thinking, What happens if that device breaks? Or if that computer goes down? Will the doctors and nurses know what to do to compensate?
The experience really brought home to me how unique hospitals are—and what a special responsibility they bear in terms of their resiliency planning.
This was something I understood intellectually before, but having my own family member in that situation really drove home the reality emotionally.
Hospitals have essentially no margin for error when it comes to being able to weather a disruption.
Unfortunately, my observations at this particular hospital, as well as at other hospitals I’ve visited, is that the technology has gotten way out in front of the ability to cross the gap if that technology fails. And sooner or later technology always fails.
As an example, in the course of my family member’s recovery, we ended up in the Emergency Room in the middle of the night. The doctors decided to use a certain machine to perform a key test, but then they found that the battery of that machine had died. No one on duty knew where a replacement battery or another machine could be found. Their Plan B was to telephone certain other staff members at home and hope they picked up. It was an hour before they were able to find another machine.
This and other experiences from those weeks led to my developing the following list of nine ways hospitals could and should strengthen their BCM preparations.
Fortunately, my loved one is doing better. My family and I have the hospital and the doctors and nurses to thank for this, as well as all the support staff.
At the same time, I wish hospitals would start doing better in terms of making their systems more resilient and redundant. Their patients are depending on it. Because sooner or later, technology and complex systems always break down.
Based on my observations as a BC professional and anxious relative, the nine items above would be a great place to start.
For more information on this and other hot topics in business continuity and IT/disaster recovery, check out these recent posts from BCMMETRICS and MHA Consulting: