Hazard-Specific Appendix Development

$0.00
Limit 1 per order

Your Emergency Operations Plan may cover the major functional areas — but does it address the specific hazards your facility actually faces? TJC and CMS expect hazard-specific documentation that reflects your facility's actual threat environment. A generic active threat appendix is not the same as one written for a hospital with a medical office building attached, shared egress, and a parking structure that creates blind spots for security. A radiological appendix means something very different for a facility with a radiation oncology suite than it does for a general acute care hospital.

D2EMC develops targeted hazard-specific appendices written to your accreditor's standards and your facility's actual threat profile. Available hazards include active threat and hostile events, infectious disease outbreak, radiological incidents, severe weather, utility and infrastructure failure, cyber incidents, and other facility-specific or regionally specific hazards not covered by standard templates.

Your Discovery Call — Free of Charge Before we begin, we schedule a free discovery call to understand which hazard or hazards the appendix needs to address, what existing documentation you have, your accreditor and survey timeline, and what's driving the engagement. Your quote is prepared and shared with you after that call.

What You Walk Away With A completed, standards-compliant hazard-specific appendix ready to integrate into your Emergency Operations Plan and your survey file. The appendix is written to your facility's actual threat environment — not a generic template — and includes response protocols, role assignments, decision trees, and integration points with your base EOP. You also receive guidance on how to incorporate the appendix into your training and exercise cycle to ensure your team can execute what's written.

Best for: Facilities with unique or elevated exposure to a specific hazard, hospitals recovering from a TJC or CMS citation tied to a specific hazard appendix, and programs building out their EOP one hazard at a time.

Your Emergency Operations Plan may cover the major functional areas — but does it address the specific hazards your facility actually faces? TJC and CMS expect hazard-specific documentation that reflects your facility's actual threat environment. A generic active threat appendix is not the same as one written for a hospital with a medical office building attached, shared egress, and a parking structure that creates blind spots for security. A radiological appendix means something very different for a facility with a radiation oncology suite than it does for a general acute care hospital.

D2EMC develops targeted hazard-specific appendices written to your accreditor's standards and your facility's actual threat profile. Available hazards include active threat and hostile events, infectious disease outbreak, radiological incidents, severe weather, utility and infrastructure failure, cyber incidents, and other facility-specific or regionally specific hazards not covered by standard templates.

Your Discovery Call — Free of Charge Before we begin, we schedule a free discovery call to understand which hazard or hazards the appendix needs to address, what existing documentation you have, your accreditor and survey timeline, and what's driving the engagement. Your quote is prepared and shared with you after that call.

What You Walk Away With A completed, standards-compliant hazard-specific appendix ready to integrate into your Emergency Operations Plan and your survey file. The appendix is written to your facility's actual threat environment — not a generic template — and includes response protocols, role assignments, decision trees, and integration points with your base EOP. You also receive guidance on how to incorporate the appendix into your training and exercise cycle to ensure your team can execute what's written.

Best for: Facilities with unique or elevated exposure to a specific hazard, hospitals recovering from a TJC or CMS citation tied to a specific hazard appendix, and programs building out their EOP one hazard at a time.