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Nursing Homes Must Have Smoke Detectors in Rooms:
New CMS Rule
Applies to those without sprinklers or electronic
detectors
March 29, 2005 - Nursing homes that do not have
sprinkler systems or hard-wired smoke detectors will have to install
battery-operated ones in patient rooms and public areas according to an
announcement by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
This is an important rule that could save many
lives by making real improvements in nursing home safety, said CMS
Administrator Mark B. McClellan, M.D., Ph.D. Nursing home residents are
an especially vulnerable population and we need to take every step
possible to protect them.
CMS took this unprecedented action after two tragic
nursing home fires in Connecticut and Tennessee in 2003. Neither home
had smoke detectors in the patient rooms where the fires originated.
The agency worked closely with the National Fire Protection Association
to develop ways to get effective fire protection into all facilities.
A review of the two incidents by the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) asserted that smoke detectors could have
resulted in quicker staff response that may have led to a better
outcome.
Todays action will considerably improve the safety
of residents living in over 4,000 nursing homes that do not have
sprinkler systems. Newly constructed nursing facilities are required to
be fully covered by a sprinkler system, while older homes built of
noncombustible materials like concrete block are not. Homes will be
given a year in which to comply with the new requirement.
The NFPA is the group that developed the 2000
edition of the Life Safety Code that CMS uses to set the standard in
health care facilities.
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