Adams Operations Group – Services
Three ways to close the gap.
Emergency preparedness isn’t one conversation. It’s a sequence — plan, test, train. Here’s how that works.
Most organizations have something on paper. A binder, a posted evacuation route, a phone tree that hasn’t been updated in three years. That’s not the same as being prepared.
Real readiness has three components: a plan that’s built to your facility and your regulatory requirements, people in leadership who’ve actually worked through a scenario before the real one happens, and frontline staff who know exactly what to do in the first three minutes. Adams Operations Group delivers all three — as a full sequence or as individual engagements, depending on where you are and what you need most.
Plan
Your organization is required to have an emergency action plan. Most don't have one that's facility-specific, current, and built to the standards that CMS, the Joint Commission, and OSHA 1910.38 actually require.
What you get:
- A structured facility assessment — two to three on-site visits
- A finished, facility-specific EAP built to your regulatory environment
- A document your staff can actually use, not just file
Investment: $3,500–$6,000
Single-location healthcare organizations: typically $4,500
Test
A plan that's never been tested is a plan that hasn't been finished. Tabletop exercises put your leadership team through a realistic scenario — no equipment, no disruption to operations — and surface the gaps before a real event does.
What you get:
- A custom scenario built around your facility type and likely risks
- A half-day facilitated exercise with your leadership and department heads
- A written after-action report with specific findings and recommended actions
Investment: $2,500–$4,000
Train
Plans and exercises happen at the leadership level. The people who answer the phone, unlock the door, and call 911 are your frontline staff — and they need to know what to do before leadership arrives. This training is built for them.
What you get:
- A two to three hour on-site workshop, with multiple sessions available for shift-based organizations
- Role-specific instruction on pre-arrival actions, 911 communication, and evacuation execution
- A quick-reference card left with every participant
Investment: $1,500–$2,500 per session
Not sure where to start?
Most organizations begin with the EAP — it establishes the foundation everything else builds on. But if you’ve already got a plan and you’re not sure it would hold up, a tabletop exercise is the faster path to an answer. Either way, a single conversation gets you oriented.