BS5839 part 1 is the benchmark standard from which we should work. No argument. But it needs to be applied with some intelligence.
Who needs to be alerted by a fire alarm?
Who may be visiting the building or working in the building apart from the staff and residents?
Do all areas of the building need to be evacuated and alerted at the same time?
Do sleeping people, dependent on others for assistance in an emergency, who are in areas remote from a fire in a building with full compartmentation need to be alerted for every event?
Would 75 db at the bedhead wake everybody in a care home?
Would 75 db at the bedhead cause distress to those who are entirely dependent on others for their safe evacuation? A few staff cannot be everywhere, inevitably they will focus on those most at risk- closest to the fire.
Should the alarm be silenced as soon as all staff and visitors have been accounted for to enhance communication and reduce distress or, should it be left operating for the benefit of alerting and awaking everybody?
Is every resident dependent on the staff for their safe evacuation in an emergency?
Do peoples needs change?
Are residents likely to understand the principle of PHE? Or may the ambulant residents leave the building and be exposed to danger?
If ambulant, alert and aware residents are awakened and evacuate themselves by their own efforts unaided might they stray into a danger area?
Should nursing homes, care homes, childrens homes, remand homes all be treated the same?
The old green guide published in 1983 was a joint effort by the Home Office and the Scottish Home and Health Department and contained the following advice : " The fire warning signal should be audible or perceptible throughout the premises by persons who are awake and not dependent on the assistance of staff to escape, it should also be capable of rousing sleeping staff".
However it did not make any suggestions as to how this should be implemented and simply referred to the current BS.