Most common advice to care staff is, in the event of a fire in a bedroom compartment, to evacuate the unaffected rooms in the bedroom compartment involved using PHE before even considering opening the door of the room involved in fire. This is because as the potential leakage of smoke and risk of flashover may otherwise prevent safe evacuation of the rooms unaffected by fire.
My advice in respect of staff numbers, notwithstanding guidance talking about 2.5 minutes etc is that in the event of a fire if you have not evacuated the bedroom compartment involved before the arrival of the fire service then the RP is going to be in big trouble. So that's always been my starting point when taking on new clients in this sector and the RP needs take account of compartment size, peeps, staff numbers and capability and equipment needed in order to achieve this, then review your provision and in particular hone your staff's skills through drills etc to seek continuous improvement. And record what you have done.
My question is whether the provision of sprinklers would lead to a change in the advice - would sprinklers make it safe for staff, using appropriate door procedures of course, to investigate the room of origin before evacuating other rooms? Bear in mind in England the provision of sprinklers allows relaxation on door closers? In the light of the BRE report referred to in Wee Brian's posting and with both sprinklers and comprehensive L1 detection there may a chance to save a life in the room of origin without putting others at risk?
Your opinions would be welcome.