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STANLEY Access Technologies Healthcare 101: Door Solutions

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STANLEY Access Technologies

Healthcare 101: Door Solutions

STANDARDS AND CODES

2SOURCE: SAT Phase 0 Documents

CODES: Broad and contain standards. Codes are the law.

3

NEW CONSTRUCTION, INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR DOORS AND HARDWARE: IBC – 2015

International Building Code (ICC)

• ANSI 156.10, 156.19 and 156.27 Standards are currently adopted and included in the body

of the code

• Locking and panic hardware situations

REMODEL: IEBC – 2015 International Existing Building Code (ICC)

• Balancing life safety and fire safety, don’t see a lot for Healthcare

LIFE SAFETY: NFPA 101 – 2015 National Fire Protection Association

• Our automatic sliding doors do not fall under the code horizontal sliding doors. They fall under

power operated doors.

• ANSI 156.10 and .19 Standards are currently adopted and included in the body of the code

A jurisdiction (ex the state of California) can add

to a code, but can not subtract. Thus every

jurisdiction can be different.

CODES: Broad and contain standards. Codes are the law.

4

• ENVELOPE: ASHRAE 90.1 – 2013 Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential

• Relation to thermals (solar heat gain etc)

• FIRE DOORS AND OTHER OPENING PROTECTIVES: NFPA 80: 2013

• Does not pertain to automatic doors, purely fire doors

• ACCESSIBILITY: ICC/ANSI A117.1 – 2009 Accessible and Usable Buildings

and Facilities (ADA)

• ENVELOPE: IECC – 2015 International Energy Conservation Code (ICC)

• Relation to thermals (solar heat gain etc)

ANSI/BHMA STANDARDS: Product specific. These are

suggestions and voluntary.

5

POWER OPERATED PEDESTRIAN DOORS: A156.10 – 2011

• Encompasses mainly entrances

• Automatic corridors as dual egress

• Access control

POWER ASSIST AND LOW ENERGY POWER OPERATED DOORS: A156.19 – 2013

• For accessibility (ADA) requirements

POWER AND MANUALLY OPERATED REVOLVING DOORS: A156.27 – 2011

• Revolving doors don’t get credit for units of egress and are not apart of the egress pathway.

There must be a manual swing door within 10 feet of it.

By 2018 all 4 standards below will be in NFPA 101

and IBC codes, meaning they will be law.

6

ANSI/BHMA STANDARDS: Product specific. These are

suggestions and voluntary.

LOW ENERGY POWER OPERATED SLIDING AND FOLDING DOORS: A156.38 – 2014

• Meant for rooms with occupancy under 55

• Knowing act

• Doesn’t require sensors

• Does not require emergency breakout

• Not currently adopted by NFPA or IBC but it will be in 2018

• Slow: 1’ per second opening, open for 5 seconds, 6” per second closing

By 2018 all 4 standards below will be in NFPA 101

and IBC codes, meaning they will be law.

7

GUIDELINES: Neither a code nor standard, but still

carries influence.

DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION: FGI – 2014 Facilities Guidelines Institute (AIA)

• The federal government used to regulate facilities and in the 90’s they

handed over to AIA which founded the FGI. They make recommendations

for healthcare facilities. They have influence because it’s the architectural

community. Architectural recommendation for facility design.

• Trying to raise the 41.5” CDO (face of door to jamb) to 44” (won’t apply to

existing construction).

8

FGI

44” CDO

Pos/Neg Pressure

ICU’s

STC (Sound

Transmittance)

ADA

ANSI/BHMA A156.19

ANSI/BHMA A156.10

IECC

ASHREH 90.1

NFRC 400 -> ASTM E283

U-Factor

SHGC

Air Leakage

NFPA

NFPA 101 (Egress)

NFPA 105 (ICU Install Smoke and Draft)

NFPA 80 (Power to Auto Door)

ANSI/BHMA A156.19

ANSI/BHMA A156.10

CBCCalifornia Building

Code

CECCalifornia Energy

Code

CFCCalifornia Fire

Code

OSHPDOffice of Statewide

Health Planning and

Development

IBC

EXAMPLE: California codes, standards and guidelines

Questions on Healthcare Codes and Standards?

Len Pursell, our Codes and Compliance Manager is available:

Email: [email protected]

Phone: 860-507-2507

9

HEALTHCARE DOOR

NEEDS AND SOLUTIONS

10SOURCE: SAT Phase 0 Documents

11

ENTRANCE

NEEDS

• Improve energy efficiencies and interior comfort while reducing the

infiltration of dust and dirt

• Convenience and safety for patients and pedestrians who may be frail,

elderly or in wheel chairs

• Emergency egress (break out)

• Optional emergency lock down

• Retrofit for renovations

• Hands free entry for infection control

• Security and access control

12

Revolving Doors for energy efficiencies

and interior comfort while reducing the

infiltration of dust and dirt: Offered in four-

wing or three-wing designs and in automatic

or manual.

STANLEY ENTRANCE SOLUTIONS

Automatic Slide Doors: Swing breakout

for emergency egress. Available in all

Glass. Germ-free entry. ADA Accessibility.

Dura-Glide 2000/3000, Dura-Storm for

hurricane resistance and Dura-Shield

for blast or ballistic ratings

Telescoping Doors: 3- or 6-panel, large

clear door opening width where space is

limited. Telescoping 5200/5300, Dura-Max

13

NEED: Lock Down/ theft protection

SOLUTION: Delayed Egress• Need sign-off from local building inspector

• Consider Delayed Egress and Ballistic door in high crime areas

NEED: Prevent patients with Alzheimer's from exiting

the building

SOLUTION: Wander ManagementOpportunity to tie STANLEY Healthcare wander management

solutions with automatic doors at assisted living facilities.

STANLEY ENTRANCE SOLUTIONS

14

• Fire codes

• Two-way traffic

• Electronic access control

• Hands free for infection control

• Infant theft protection

PASSAGE WAY

NEEDS

15

STANLEY PASSAGE WAY SOLUTIONS

Full (automatically open) and

Low (push to activate) swing

door operators. Rated for use on

fire doors. Traffic pattern options,

access control Magic-Force

(full/low energy) and Magic

Access (low energy)

16

STANELY PASSAGE WAY SOLUTIONS

NEED: Infant theft protection

SOLUTION: Opportunity to tie in Hugs (mother

infant matching) to hollow metal door with

Magic-Force Operator.

• STANLEY Security protects more than 1.5 million

infants every year in 1,400 hospitals worldwide,

making our HUGS© solution the #1 infant protection

solutions on the market.

• Monitor infants not only in the OB unit but anywhere in

the facility with an existing Wi-Fi infrastructure

• Increase infant protection

• Peace of mind for family and staff

• Improve staff efficiency

17

• Manual or hands free activation

• Access Control

• Smoke seals not required

• Positive latch not required

• Needs depend on hospital or facility

OPERATING

ROOM NEEDS

18

NEED: Unique to hospital or Facilities decision makers

SOLUTION: Magic-Force operator on pair of swing doors with

touch-less activation, Dura-Care ICU Series, Express-Swing

with touch-less activation • There is no code that governs operating room doors, thus

smoke seals and positive are latch not required

• Low occupancy so emergency egress/breakout is not required

STANELY OPERATING ROOM SOLUTIONS

19

• Access control

• Positive or negative pressure

• Seals with positive latch

• Fast closing speeds to maintain environment

ISOLATION

ROOM NEEDS

20

NEEDS: Positively or negatively pressured

environment and a way for the door to latch closed

SOLUTION: 7000 and 7200 2 panel, 7200 TL-FBO 7300

TL-FBO and 7400 swing

• Low occupancy so doesn’t need emergency egress

• According to FGI sliding doors are 6x better than

preventing the change of air in a room than a swing

door.

• Seals and bottom sweeps for positive/negative

pressure, not smoke and draft.

• Usually has to be self closing (not necessarily power

closing)

STANLEY ISOLATION ROOM SOLUTIONS

21

INTENSIVE CARE

UNIT NEEDS

• Large clear door opening for bed and

equipment transfers without having to swing

out the sliding door panels

• Easy and intuitive way to transform a sliding

door into a swinging door for an extra large

opening

• Smoke seal option

• Smooth operation

• Quiet door operation

• Nurse visibility into patient room while

balancing patient privacy

• Ease of cleaning

• Sound privacy

22

NEED: Corridor Door

SOLUTION: Dura-Care 7400 Swing

• Smoke walls only (not fire wall)

CORRIDOR

DOOR

STANLEY ICU/CCU SOLUTIONS

23

NEED: Barrier between patient and suite

SOLUTION: Dura-Care 7000 Series• For an ICU suite (individual room), a door isn’t

required (could be a curtain).

• There is nothing in the code that says and ICU

suite has to positive latch or be smoke rated.

• Because of the low occupancy, these rooms do

not need emergency breakout. A swinging open

feature is convenient for the hospital staff.

• If a corridor door has smoke seals and positive

latch, ICU doors in the suite don’t need to have

them.

ICU

DOOR

STANLEY ICU/CCU SOLUTIONS

24

NEED: Smoke Rated

SOLUTION: Smoke Rated ICU: Dura-Care 7000 2-panel,

7000TL 2-panel, 7200 TL-FBO, 7200 2-panel, 7300 TL-FBO,

7500 TL-FBO 3-panel, 7500 3-panel, 7500 3-panel, 7500TL

3-panel, 7400• The physical S label on a door (S is for smoke) is an indicator,

not a requirement. According to UL 1784 it is put on fire doors

and smoke and draft doors to show it is also a smoke door.

• A patient room door into a corridor needs to be smoke rated

and positive latch.

• Smoke tight is different than smoke rated.

STANLEY ICU/CCU SOLUTIONS

25

Many of STANLEY’s Intensive Care Unit Doors come with the option to add Positive Latch and

Smoke and Draft Seals to meet smoke and draft requirements (leakage rated under ANSI/UL1784

and labeled as a smoke barrier.) Try the 7000 and 7000 TL 2 panel, 7200 TL-FBO, 7200 2 panel,

7500 TL-FBO 3-panel or 7500 TL 3-Panel or the 7400 Swing

Smoke and Draft rated doors have two main benefits:

• Allow hospital personnel to protect patients in ICU environments until fire and smoke is

contained versus dangerously transporting critical patients connected to equipment in the

event of a fire.

• Allow architects greater flexibility in designing ICU areas where certain patient-to-nurse ratios

could be an issue with a fire marshal.

ABOUT SMOKE AND DRAFT

NFPA 105 is a standard for installation of smoke door assemblies

and other devices and is tested in accordance with air leakage

requirements.

UL 1784 (Air Leakage Test of Door Assemblies) was developed for

areas of health care facilities where smoke infiltration is a concern.

It consists of testing at ambient and high temperature (400º F) and

ensuring leakage rate does not exceeding 3 ft3/minute/sqft.

NEEDS: Large clear door opening

SOLUTION: Dura-Care 7200 or 7300

TL-FBO ICU Series• Only STANLEY has a 2-panel design (most

commonly requested ICU configuration) with the largest CDO in the industry at 44” on a typical 8’ package.

• State codes, Facilities Guidelines Institute, architects and hospital staffs starting to require 44” CDO

26

STANLEY ICU/CCU SOLUTIONS

27

NEEDS: Antimicrobial finish for infection

control

SOLUTION: STANLEY offers the Antimicrobial

coatings• Increasing requests by healthcare architects

for AM finish on touch points only or entire

package

• SAT offers this additive in any standard or

custom paint color

STANLEY ICU/CCU SOLUTIONS

28

NEEDS: Patient privacy

SOLUTION: Electronic privacy glass offered

as an option on Dura-Care™ 7000 Series,

7200 and 7500 Telescoping Series• Infection control: 92% of hospital privacy

curtains are contaminated with potentially

dangerous bacteria* This bacteria on curtains

can transfer to clean hands or gloves of

hospital workers, leading to infections

• Long-term cost savings: U.S. hospitals see

over 1.7 million health care associated

Infections each year at a cost of up to $45

billion a year**. 1 ICU curtain for 1 year,

including laundering is $1,696. That’s $10,176

invested for the 6 year lifecycle of the curtain**

• Space efficient: Effectively add square footage

to small ICU rooms while eliminating the

nuisance of curtains and curtain rods

* American Journal for Infection Control | ** PurThread Technologies

STANLEY ICU/CCU SOLUTIONS

STANLEY SECURITY

HEALTHCARE SOLUTIONS

29SOURCE: SAT Phase 0 Documents

31

Access Control/Infant Protection Staff Duress

CCTV/Asset Management Partner Integrations

31

UNPARALLELED SOLTUION INTEGRATION

32

NURSE

CALL

ENVIRONMENTAL

MONITORING

STORAGE AND

SUPPLY CHAIN

CLINCAL

WORKFLOW

INFANT PROTECTION

WANDER

MGMT.

STAFF

DURESS

CONVERGENT SECURITY

MECHANICAL

ACCESS

ACCESS

TECHNOLOGIES

SAFETYEXPERIENCE 32

ASSET MANAGEMENTPATIENT FLOW

STAFF VISIBILITY

FALL MANAGEMENT

HAND HYGIENE

SECURITYEFFICIENCY

UNMATCHED PRODUCT BREADTH

Thank You

Appendix

34SOURCE: SAT Phase 0 Documents

35

Stanley Black and Decker: A Powerful Portfolio of Brands

Stanley Black & Decker: A Recognized Global Leader

MOSTSUSTAINABLE

MOSTECO-FRIENDLY

MOSTINVENTIVE

BESTLEADERS

MOSTINNOVATIVE

MOSTLOVED

MOSTADMIRED

MOSTREPUTABLE

ProviderElectronicSecurity

Commercial Hardware

AutomaticDoors

EASData

Analytics

STANLEY Security: Market Position

37

Leading Brands

#2 Commercial Electronic Security Provider With Broadest Breadth Of Line

STANLEY Security Capabilities

38

Intrusion and Fire Monitoring

CommercialHardware Solutions

Electronic Article Surveillance

Automatic Door Solutions

Mechanical / Electronic Access Solutions

Patient & Asset Protection

Unmatched Security Technology Offerings

Big Data / Analytics

STANLEY Access Technologies:

Setting the global standard for more than 80 years

39

• Stanley invented Door Automation in 1932

• Largest manufacturer, installer and service

provider of automatic doors in North America.

• Headquartered in Farmington, CT.

• Current Employees ~ 1,000

• Four Manufacturing Facilities:

Farmington, Connecticut

Indianapolis, IN

Toronto, Ontario (Canada)

Shanghai, China

• Centralized support operations including:

Manufacturing (ISO Certified)

Centralized service call center / technical support center

North American Market

CoverageThe Largest Service Market Coverage in

North America

40

Stanley Access Technologies Direct:

29 offices

450+ technicians with an average of 12 years

experience

Stanley Access Technologies Distributors

40 offices (U.S.)

300+ technicians

Includes AK & HI