In a recent Q&A on the FacilityCare website, consultant Brad Keyes answered a question about egress hardware.
Q: We have clinic-type areas within suites. Some of the doors that lead to the main corridor for egress have regular turn-type handles, not panic hardware. Where is it required to have panic hardware on a door, and when are turn handles permitted? Is there a rule of thumb on when a door has to have panic hardware for egress?
A: Horizontal egress hardware on a door (commonly referred to as crash bars) is not required in a healthcare occupancy. Crash bars are required on doors in the path of egress from assembly occupancies. So, if a hospital has a dining area or an auditorium, these are assembly occupancy areas, and horizontal crash bars would be required even if the entire area is classified as a healthcare occupancy.
Mature Dry Surface Biofilm Presents a Problem for Candida Auris
Sutter Health's Arden Care Center Officially Opens
Insight Hospital and Medical Center Falls to Data Breach
The High Cost of Healthcare Violence
EVS Teams Can Improve Patient Experience in Emergency Departments