Implementing a robust Business Continuity Management (BCM) framework is not just a regulatory necessity but a strategic imperative. This chapter outlines the BCM planning methodology tailored to IJN’s healthcare setting, ensuring that patient care, medical procedures, and support operations can continue or recover swiftly in the face of any crisis.
IJN's BCM planning methodology adopts a structured, seven-phase approach. This framework is aligned with ISO 22301 standards for Business Continuity Management Systems (BCMS), addressing not only the continuity of critical healthcare services but also the resilience of medical infrastructure, ICT systems, and clinical support functions.
This chapter will detail how each phase is practically implemented at IJN, integrating the institute’s clinical priorities, patient safety commitments, and operational excellence principles.
This chapter introduces the seven-phase Business Continuity Management (BCM) planning methodology, tailored to the unique risks and operating requirements of a specialist healthcare institution.
It highlights how IJN can systematically embed resilience into its clinical, support, and administrative functions to safeguard patient outcomes and uphold institutional trust.
By exploring each of the seven phases—from project initiation to ongoing program management—the chapter equips healthcare risk managers, department heads, and continuity planners with a framework to ensure uninterrupted delivery of essential services.
Readers will learn how to align continuity planning with IJN’s medical priorities, regulatory expectations, and stakeholder commitments, enabling the hospital to navigate both foreseeable and unexpected disruptions effectively.
The first phase of BCM implementation at IJN involves establishing a formal project structure to manage the BCM lifecycle. This includes forming a BCM steering committee comprising senior medical officers, administrative leadership, and ICT representatives.
A project charter defines roles, responsibilities, timelines, and resource allocation. Given the critical nature of cardiac healthcare, executive buy-in from the hospital's leadership is essential to ensure a cross-departmental commitment to continuity planning.
Appoint a BCM Project Sponsor from the Medical Leadership Team (e.g., Chief Medical Officer) to ensure alignment of continuity planning with clinical priorities and regulatory compliance under the Ministry of Health (MOH) Malaysia.
In this phase, IJN identifies internal and external threats that may impact its ability to deliver essential cardiology services. This includes medical equipment failures, cyberattacks on patient data systems, disease outbreaks, and supply chain disruptions for life-saving medications. A comprehensive risk register is developed, with likelihood and impact assessments tailored to healthcare-specific scenarios.
Conduct a facility-wide hazard vulnerability assessment (HVA) that includes clinical, ICT, pharmaceutical, and biomedical engineering risks.
The BIA process identifies IJN’s critical services—such as cardiac surgery, catheterisation labs, intensive care units, and emergency cardiac response teams—and quantifies the impact of their disruption.
Recovery Time Objectives (RTOs) and Recovery Point Objectives (RPOs) are defined for each clinical and operational function.
Dependencies on critical systems, such as electronic medical records (EMR) and pharmacy databases, are also documented.
Classify all medical services and procedures by criticality and assign recovery priorities based on patient safety, legal obligations, and continuity of care.
This phase involves identifying and selecting continuity strategies that enable IJN to sustain or resume essential services within the defined RTOs. Strategies may include the use of alternate treatment areas, mutual aid agreements with nearby hospitals, or establishing off-site data recovery centres for EMR systems. Clinical staff rotation plans and surge capacity procedures are also developed.
Develop alternate care strategies for time-sensitive procedures such as angioplasty and cardiac surgery, including designated backup operating theatres and transfer agreements with tertiary care hospitals.
IJN develops detailed Business Continuity Plans (BCPs) for each department, aligning them with previously formulated strategies. The plans include activation protocols, staff roles and responsibilities, communication procedures, and escalation hierarchies.
Department-specific BCPs are customised for clinical units (e.g., ICU, Cardiac Surgery), non-clinical departments (e.g., IT, Facilities), and support services (e.g., Pharmacy, Radiology).
Ensure each BCP includes procedures for preserving the cold chain of cardiovascular drugs and blood products during power outages or equipment failure.
Regular drills and simulation exercises are conducted to test the effectiveness of IJN’s continuity plans. These may include medical response drills, IT system failover tests, or emergency evacuation simulations. Post-exercise reviews are critical for identifying weaknesses and refining procedures.
Conduct at least one annual full-scale clinical continuity exercise involving cardiology units, including live patient transfer simulation and activation of backup medical equipment.
BCM at IJN must be continuously improved through regular reviews, audits, training, and updates to the BCPs. Key performance indicators (KPIs) and governance mechanisms are implemented to monitor BCM effectiveness. Integration with IJN’s Quality and Risk Management framework ensures that continuity planning remains aligned with institutional goals and regulatory changes.
Establish a permanent BCM office within the Quality and Risk Management Department, responsible for maintaining BCM documentation, conducting training, and ensuring ISO 22301 compliance.
This chapter outlines the implementation of a seven-phase Business Continuity Management planning methodology specific to Institut Jantung Negara.
It begins with establishing project governance and leadership (Project Management), followed by identifying and analysing potential threats (Risk Analysis and Review) and assessing the operational and clinical impacts of disruptions (Business Impact Analysis).
The chapter then describes how IJN formulates practical response and recovery strategies (Business Continuity Strategy), develops department-level continuity plans (Plan Development), and conducts training and testing to validate them (Testing and Exercising).
Finally, the chapter addresses long-term sustainability and governance of the BCM program (Program Management).
By following this framework, IJN strengthens its preparedness for a range of disruptive events that could threaten the continuity of critical cardiac services. The methodology ensures that continuity plans are not only documented but also tested, maintained, and integrated into day-to-day operations.
This chapter serves as a foundational guide for implementing a resilient healthcare delivery system anchored in ISO 22301 best practices and aligned with the mission of ensuring uninterrupted cardiac care for the nation.
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