Emergency Evacuation During a Hospital Fire
CE Information
1.0 CERP creditCompletion Time
1 hourAvailable Until
September 18, 2026Posted By
AACN Houston Gulf Coast ChapterNavigate
Overview
Specialties
Ambulatory Care, Critical Care, Educational/Research, Emergency/Trauma, Management/Admin/Leadership, Professional Development, and Quality / Risk ManagementOn January 2017, a fire ignited at UTMB Galveston, in the John Sealy Hospital. The smoke from the fire affected several units, including a mother/baby unit and an ICU. This is the retelling of the situation by the speaker, who was an administrator at the time. She, along with bedside staff and emergency personnel, worked together to successfully evacuate all the patients. She also recounts the lessons learned from this emergency situation.
Learning Objectives
The learner will understand the high risk, low volume nature of large-scale hospital evacuation.
The learner will be able to understand the importance of the Incident Command Structure during an emergency event.
The learner gain insight on important evacuation techniques.
Speakers
Rachel Wheeler-McAnally is a dedicated critical care nurse with a Master of Science in Nursing. Driven by a passion for delivering exceptional care to critically ill patients, she brings a wealth of expertise and compassion to the intensive care unit. With a strong focus on patient-centered care, she is committed to creating positive patient experiences and fostering a supportive environment for the healthcare team. Beyond clinical excellence, Rachel is passionate about nurse well-being and strives to promote a healthy work-life balance for colleagues.
CE Information
This activity offers 1.0 CERP credit to attendees.
Accredited by AACN.
This nursing continuing professional development activity was approved by the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses, an accredited approver by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation.
Disclosures
This nursing continuing professional development activity was approved by the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses, an accredited approver by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation.
Participants/Learner’s must attend the whole presentation, missing no more than 10 minutes and complete an evaluation in order to be awarded a CE certificate.
No relevant relationships between ineligible companies and individuals with the ability to influence content of this activity have been identified by the Nurse Planner.
Activity Content
Duration: about 1 hour | Quality: HD
11 questions
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