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NFPA 70B FOR HOSPITALS

NFPA 70B Compliance for Hospitals

Every electrical failure in a hospital is a patient safety event. Every documentation gap creates simultaneous exposure to The Joint Commission, CMS, and OSHA. Here is what NFPA 70B requires and how healthcare facilities are meeting it.

“We were up and running the same day. The assessments walk you through every piece of equipment so your crew doesn’t have to be 70B experts, and the documentation it produces is exactly what our compliance team needs. Easy to use, does what it says. I’d recommend it to any facility manager dealing with these requirements.”

Electrical Foreman, Large Public Hospital, Chicago, IL

Why Hospital NFPA 70B Compliance Is Different

When the 2023 NFPA 70B update made ongoing electrical maintenance programs mandatory, hospitals faced a compliance question no other facility type shares: how do you run a fully documented electrical maintenance program on systems where a failure isn’t an operational inconvenience — it’s a patient safety event?

NFPA 70B applies fully to hospitals. The compliance stakes are higher than in almost any other setting, and the oversight is more intense. A hospital faces simultaneous scrutiny from The Joint Commission, CMS, state health departments, insurance underwriters, and OSHA — each looking at the same maintenance documentation from a different direction.

A single gap can trigger findings across all of them at once.

The Compliance Pressures Unique to Healthcare

Life Safety Dependency
Hospital electrical systems power ventilators, surgical suites, and patient monitoring. Failures are not operational disruptions — they are patient safety events with immediate life-safety consequences.
Four Oversight Bodies
The Joint Commission, CMS, state health departments, and OSHA all examine electrical maintenance documentation. A single program gap creates findings across multiple bodies simultaneously.
Essential Electrical System
NEC Article 517 requires hospitals to maintain separate backup power infrastructure — Life Safety Branch, Critical Branch, and Equipment Branch. NFPA 70B applies to all of it.
No Downtime Windows
Many circuits cannot be de-energized without impacting patient care. Maintenance must be planned around active clinical operations using the redundancy the facility already provides.

JOINT COMMISSION & CMS

Accreditation Surveys Look for Exactly This Documentation

The Joint Commission’s Environment of Care standard EC.02.05.01 requires hospitals to maintain utilities equipment in safe, reliable condition. Surveyors examine maintenance documentation during accreditation reviews — specifically the kind of records NFPA 70B requires.

A complete NFPA 70B program with current condition assessments, documented intervals, and a written EMP directly satisfies what surveyors look for. Facilities without it face findings requiring corrective action plans and follow-up surveys.

CMS Conditions of Participation carry the same expectations. A hospital that loses accreditation over maintenance documentation gaps faces consequences far beyond the cost of a proper program.

Gimba NFPA 70B reports interface showing hospital electrical maintenance audit documentation ready for Joint Commission survey

Gimba asset record for hospital electrical equipment showing NFPA 70B condition rating, maintenance history and next inspection date

EQUIPMENT COVERAGE

Every Asset. Every Branch. Fully Documented.

Hospital NFPA 70B programs must cover the full electrical distribution system — not just the equipment your PM contractor visits. The complete asset inventory includes:

  Emergency generators and paralleling switchgear

  Automatic and static transfer switches

  Main switchgear and medium-voltage distribution

  UPS systems protecting critical clinical loads

  Transformers feeding patient care areas

  Panel boards in surgical suites, ICUs, and imaging

HOW GIMBA HANDLES THIS

Your Team Doesn’t Need to Be NFPA 70B Experts

Gimba’s guided condition assessment walks technicians through every evaluation criterion for each device type. Plain-language questions. The system applies NFPA 70B criteria automatically and sets the correct maintenance interval based on device type and condition rating.

When a Joint Commission surveyor asks for your electrical maintenance documentation, you generate your complete Electrical Maintenance Program in one click. Full asset inventory, current condition ratings, maintenance history, and upcoming schedule — formatted and ready.

Flat-rate pricing. Same-day onboarding. No per-user fees.

 

 

Healthcare Insurance and NFPA 70B Documentation

Property and business interruption insurance for hospitals is expensive and increasingly tied to maintenance documentation. Underwriters request EMP documentation during applications, renewals, and after any electrical event.

A hospital that cannot produce current records after an electrical incident faces claim denial on top of the operational and patient safety consequences. A complete, software-managed program is the most cost-effective risk management a healthcare facility can implement.

Without a Program
Claim denial risk after incidents. Increased premiums at renewal. OSHA citation exposure.
With Gimba
Documentation ready on demand. Program current at all times. Survey-ready any day.

Build Your Hospital NFPA 70B Program Today

Most hospital maintenance teams are up and running the same day. Import existing equipment data or start fresh — Gimba handles the complexity of healthcare electrical systems.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does NFPA 70B apply to hospitals?

Yes. NFPA 70B applies to any facility with significant electrical infrastructure — and hospitals sit at the top of that list. The 2023 edition made compliance mandatory. Hospitals are required to have a documented, ongoing Electrical Maintenance Program covering all electrical equipment.

How does NFPA 70B interact with Joint Commission requirements?

The Joint Commission’s EC.02.05.01 requires documented utilities maintenance. A complete NFPA 70B program with current condition assessments and maintenance records directly satisfies what surveyors look for. Facilities without documentation face corrective action findings and follow-up surveys.

Who inspects hospitals for NFPA 70B compliance?

The Joint Commission, CMS, state health departments, insurance underwriters, and OSHA inspectors. Each evaluates the same documentation from a different angle. A single gap creates exposure across all of them simultaneously.

What is the Essential Electrical System and how does NFPA 70B apply?

The Essential Electrical System is the backup power infrastructure required by NEC Article 517 — the Life Safety Branch, Critical Branch, and Equipment Branch. All EES equipment requires documented maintenance under NFPA 70B. Generators, transfer switches, and UPS systems all fall within scope. See our system studies guide for how arc flash and system studies interact.

How quickly can a hospital get compliant with Gimba?

Most hospitals are up and running the same day. If existing equipment data is in a spreadsheet or electrical study files, Gimba imports it and generates a compliant EMP within hours. Starting from scratch typically takes one to three days on-site with the guided nameplate capture workflow.


Related reading: What Is NFPA 70B? | What an EMP Requires | Maintenance Intervals | NFPA 70B Software | Consequences of Non-Compliance | Schedule a Demo