From Yahoo:
“Nursing Homes Face Dilemma:
Vaccinate Staff or Don't Get Paid.”
Marita Smith runs a nursing home
in Seattle, while Janet Snipes manages one in Denver. They share years of
experience in the industry and painful memories of COVID-19, but have sharply
differing views of a new federal policy that will mandate vaccinations for all
nursing home employees. In Smith’s view, unvaccinated people should not be
caring for a vulnerable population already hit hard by the pandemic. The
industry is again experiencing rising infection rates and deaths among
residents, although none approaching the peak figures of last year, and the
mandate is intended to head off another surge. “It’s great,” said Smith,
administrator at St. Anne Nursing and Rehab Center, calling the policy a
“pretty big deal” that would “flush out health care professionals who shouldn’t
be in health care.” Such departures are precisely what worry Snipes, executive
director of Holly Heights Care Center in Denver. She, too, wants to see all
nursing home workers vaccinated, but not at the risk of losing employees who
won’t comply, amid a labor shortage in an industry with an already high
turnover rate.
Of the 1.5 million nursing home
staff in the United States, some 540,000 — 40% of the workforce — are
unvaccinated. Their fate could be directly impacted by a policy announced
Wednesday by President Joe Biden requiring all nursing home employees to be
vaccinated, with the rules likely to take effect sometime in September.
Facilities that fail to meet that target could face fines or lose eligibility
to receive federal reimbursement, a vital source of income for many. The
practical effect of the policy is that workers will have to be vaccinated or
lose their jobs. Snipes said several employees had told her that they might
leave. One, whom she described as her best nurse, told her she was “very, very
afraid” of the vaccine, in part because she is Black and concerned about
medical experimentation of the past. Getting vaccinated “is the safest thing
for our residents and our staff, but we feel strongly he needs to mandate for
all health care settings,” Snipes said of the president. “We can’t afford to
lose staff to hospitals and assisted living facilities.”
Several major nursing home
chains, and some states, have already imposed vaccine mandates. Industry
officials said inoculations were strongly advised, but their position on the
new policy echoed that of Snipes. “We will lose tens of thousands, maybe hundred
thousands, of workers,” said Mark Parkinson, president and CEO of the American
Health Care Association, a major nursing home trade group. He said he was
hoping for policy modifications and had already spoken about them to Dr. Lee
Fleisher, chief medical officer of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, and was seeking a meeting with Xavier Becerra, the secretary of
health and human services. The chief change sought by the industry is a signal
from the administration that a mandate will eventually apply across all health
care settings, so that nursing home employees recognize that there is nowhere
else to go. “Mandate it for everybody,” Parkinson said.
In fact, roughly 2,000 hospitals
have already issued vaccine mandates, reducing job options for unvaccinated
health care workers. Fleisher said that the CMS and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention had seen in recent data a relationship between rising
infections at nursing homes and unvaccinated staff. “The higher the percentage
of unvaccinated staff, the higher the percentage of cases we saw in those
homes,” Fleisher said. “There was a strong relationship.” Currently, 60% of
nursing home staff nationwide are vaccinated, far below the industry’s earlier
goal of 75% by the end of June. Parkinson said the industry also was lobbying
the government to start “a much more intense media campaign to influence
workers” that vaccines are safe and effective. The trade organization also
wants the government to create a grace period for hesitant staff. Dr. Joshua
Uy, a geriatrician and medical director of a nursing home in Philadelphia, said
he had already seen the staffing challenges and was “ecstatic about the
mandate.” “I am exhausted,” he said. “The vaccine is like a mini fortress
around the most vulnerable, where even though there is a fire raging outside,
those inside stay safe.” The mandate aims to avoid a surge in COVID cases and
deaths in a highly vulnerable population.
Of the 625,000 COVID deaths in
the United States to date, nearly one-fifth — 133,700 — have been nursing home
residents, according to the CDC. And a recent CDC study at 4,000 nursing homes
found that the effectiveness of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines among nursing
home residents dropped from 75% in the spring to 53% by midsummer, as the delta
variant became more widespread. “The findings highlight the critical importance
of COVID-19 vaccination of staff members, residents, and visitors,” the study’s
authors noted. Public health experts are concerned that unvaccinated employees
could bring COVID-19 into a nursing home and infect residents. More than 80% of
nursing home residents nationwide are vaccinated, but already cases are rising
in this population. In the week ending Aug. 15, 354 nursing home residents died
with COVID-19, the highest figure since mid-March, and 3,585 tested positive,
according to the CDC. More staff members are getting sick too, the CDC has
found. The week ending Aug. 15 saw 5,810 nursing home employees ill with
COVID-19, five times higher than a month earlier, and 25 staff members died. Earlier
this month, Good Samaritan Society, which operates 142 nursing homes
nationwide, announced that all 15,000 staff members must be vaccinated by Nov.
1 — a position the company took after seeing a rise in resident infections in
homes where unvaccinated staff also tested positive. So far, staffing levels
have remained steady, said Randy Bury, the company’s CEO, who has argued in the
past that such mandates would create safe, desirable workplaces. But he argued
that the Biden administration’s new policy was misguided unless it was applied
across the whole health care sector. “What’s the difference in a long-term care
facility or in a hospital?” Bury said. “They’re susceptible to the virus if
they come in contact with unvaccinated staff.” LeadingAge, a nonprofit
representing 2,000 nursing homes, and which had previously called for mandates
at individual homes, criticized the Biden policy for its narrow focus. “The
administration is right,” Katie Smith Sloan, president and CEO of LeadingAge,
said in a published statement. “We are on wartime footing. Defunding the care
providers who continue to fight on the front lines would be a tragic misstep.” Snipes,
the director of Holly Heights in Denver, said she has spent months trying to
educate the staff and encourage vaccination. She said that most of her
unvaccinated employees had agreed to obey the mandate, but she mentioned three
whom she feared might leave. One told her that said she did not want to put
anything foreign in her body. A second, who was Catholic, said he did not want
an mRNA vaccine on religious grounds, and he had a letter of support from his
bishop. The third was the Black nurse who “of all the people I’ve spoken to
sounds the most afraid,” Snipes said. “I want to save her as an employee.”
^ Biden makes a mandate and then everyone
else has to deal with the employee shortages that will result from it. I agree that
only the vaccinated should be allowed to work in nursing homes, long-term
homes, hospitals, etc. but there needs to be a firm plan of help from the Federal
Government to make sure there are enough vaccinated health care workers. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/nursing-homes-face-dilemma-vaccinate-125120614.html
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