The Challenge
Healthcare facilities cannot simply suspend operations during a crisis. Patient safety, critical care continuity and medical supply chains must be maintained under all hazard scenarios — including simultaneous multi-hazard events.
Hospital operations depend on power, water, medical gases, pharmaceutical supply chains and IT systems. Failure in any single dependency propagates rapidly through clinical operations.
JCI and national accreditation standards increasingly require documented, tested emergency operations plans. Self-reported compliance is no longer sufficient.
The Omniversel Approach
Hazard Vulnerability Analysis methodology adapted for Turkish hospital environments — covering earthquake, flood, NATECH, pandemic and infrastructure failure scenarios.
Crisis command structures aligned to Hospital Emergency Incident Command System — enabling rapid, coordinated response across clinical and administrative functions.
Life-critical processes identified and prioritized. RTO targets established for ICU, emergency, pharmacy, laboratory and surgical operations.
Medical supply dependencies mapped and stress-tested. Alternative supplier networks and inventory buffers assessed and documented.
Across Istanbul metropolitan area, spanning tertiary hospitals and primary care networks.
Applied to critical clinical processes — identifying failure points before they become incidents.
Use Cases
Full EOP development covering all hazard scenarios, command structures, patient evacuation and clinical continuity protocols.
Enterprise continuity planning across hospital networks — maintaining care delivery standards when individual facilities are compromised.
Assessment and documentation outputs structured to support JCI Emergency Management chapter requirements.
Our advisory team works with healthcare organizations to develop compliant, operationally tested resilience programs.