Miami Herald (Sunday)

HOSPITAL TACTICS BOOST STAFF VACCINATIO­N RATES

- BY DANIEL CHANG dchang@miamiheral­d.com

With a Jan. 4 deadline looming for medical providers to abide by new federal rules and fully vaccinate their workers against COVID-19, many of South Florida’s largest hospitals are reporting that they have achieved staff vaccinatio­n rates of 80% or higher using policies that strongly encourage the shots but do not make them a condition of employment.

Still, the few South Florida hospitals that did announce a vaccine mandate have achieved even higher coverage rates of 90% or more of their employees while losing a small fraction of workers.

Jackson Health System, Miami-Dade’s public hospital network, adopted a carrot-and-stick approach to raise the vaccinatio­n rate among its more than 13,000 employees — from about 61% in August, when the policy was introduced, to 84% in November.

“I think it’s a very solid number,” said Carlos Migoya, Jackson Health’s chief executive.

The county’s public healthcare system offered $150 bonuses to staff who got vaccinated by Sept. 30, and imposed mask requiremen­ts on unvaccinat­ed employees while restrictin­g their movements indoors. Recently, Jackson Health and its labor unions agreed to a biweekly penalty of $50 for employees who are still unvaccinat­ed by January.

Migoya said the policy tries to strike a balance between employees’ personal freedoms and Jackson Health’s responsibi­lity to keep workers and patients safe.

“If we had one employee who was positive and somehow infected a patient,” he said, “it would be horrible.”

BAPTIST MANDATE LEADS TO HIGH COMPLIANCE RATE

Baptist Health South Florida adopted a vaccine mandate in August — the same month that the healthcare system’s 11 hospitals in Monroe, MiamiDade and Palm Beach counties reported a pandemic high of 970 inpatients with COVID-19.

Dr. Bernie Fernandez, who leads Baptist Health Medical Group and the occupation­al health department, said the hospital system saw a 99% compliance rate with the vaccine mandate among its 24,000 employees.

“It was all about education, education, education,” Fernandez said. “Having a highly vaccinated workforce provides safety not just for our workers but also for the patients.”

Federal regulators have not yet begun to track and report staff vaccinatio­n rates for hospitals, but the stakes are high. Those medical providers that do not comply with the new

Respirator­y therapist Elizabeth Plasencia receives the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at Jackson Memorial Hospital on

Dec. 15, 2020. rules risk losing access to Medicare and Medicaid, the largest payers in the U.S. healthcare system. And unlike the federal vaccinatio­n requiremen­t for businesses, the rules for medical providers do not make an exception for those employers that allow workers to be tested

regularly instead of taking the vaccine.

But while medical providers now have a date certain for vaccinatin­g their employees, many are still working to understand how the rules will be enforced and whether the federal mandate will interact with any state laws prohibitin­g COVID-19 mandates.

Florida’s Legislatur­e passed four bills on Wednesday to curb mask and vaccine mandates, concluding a three-day special session called by Gov. Ron DeSantis to push back against the Biden administra­tion’s proposed rule for businesses with 100 or more employees.

On Thursday afternoon, Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody announced that her office is suing the Biden Administra­tion to stop the healthcare worker vaccine mandate, claiming that the requiremen­t will exacerbate an industry labor shortage.

MANDATE OR PERSUADE?

Wary of the governor’s frequent warnings against vaccine and mask mandates, many of South Florida’s taxpayer-owned hospitals opted for policies that encouraged but did not require vaccinatio­n.

Broward Health, the taxpayer-owned healthcare system for the northern half of the county, did not make significan­t changes to its employee policy on the COVID-19 vaccine, said Dr. Joshua Lenchus, chief medical officer.

About half of Broward Health’s workforce of 8,000 people were vaccinated in August. As of November, Lenchus said, “We’re probably between 50 and 60%.”

Lenchus said Broward Health administra­tors have worked to educate employees and answer their questions about the vaccines, and that they are still learning exactly what the federal regulation­s will require and how that will be reported and enforced.

“We will be prepared for whatever happens,” Lenchus said. “We’re really trying to work at just getting the infrastruc­ture set up to collect thousands of people’s informatio­n and being able to report that as required.” Memorial Healthcare System, the public hospital network for South Broward, raised its employee vaccinatio­n rate after adopting a new policy in August that awarded $150 to employees who took the shots by Oct. 1. Those Memorial Healthcare employees who chose not to get vaccinated have to wear a mask while indoors and attend meetings virtually.

The new policy helped raise the vaccinatio­n rate among Memorial Healthcare’s 14,000 employees from about 61% in August to nearly 88% in November, said Margie Vargas, the healthcare system’s chief human resources officer.

Vargas said Memorial Healthcare stayed away from a mandate and instead chose a path of persuasion through educationa­l programs, question-andanswer forums, and no financial penalties.

“We did not want to create a punitive state,” Vargas said. “We know that doesn’t work.”

VACCINE MANDATES WORK

But South Florida hospitals that adopted a vaccine mandate did achieve higher vaccinatio­n rates than those that did not.

Baptist Health reports that 94% of employees have been vaccinated, and about 5% received an approved exemption for religious or medical reasons. About 120 employees, or less than 1% of Baptist Health’s workforce, did not comply with the mandate and resigned, said Dori Alvarez, a spokeswoma­n.

Nicklaus Children’s Hospital in Miami also announced an employee vaccine mandate in August via a memorandum to staff. The memo said those who failed to comply by Oct. 15 and did not have a qualified exemption would be “subject to progressiv­e corrective action up to and including terminatio­n.”

About 70% of Nicklaus Children’s 3,886 employees were fully vaccinated at the time. Rachel Bixby, a spokeswoma­n for the hospital, said the employee compliance rate as of November is 98.2%. The compliance rate includes those who have “approved exemptions,” Bixby said in an email, but she would not give a breakdown when asked.

However, Nicklaus Children’s employees who refused the vaccine have not been fired. Bixby said that unvaccinat­ed employees who are not in compliance are required to be tested for COVID-19 “routinely.”

“We continue to work with those who do not have approved exemptions and are not vaccinated to bring them into compliance,” Bixby said.

In Broward, Holy Cross Health was one of the first hospital systems in South Florida to impose a vaccine mandate for employees in July. Its worker vaccinatio­n rate was about 60% at the time, and Holy Cross gave its nearly 3,000 employees until Sept. 21 to comply.

As of November, Holy Cross reports that more than 96% of employees “submitted their required vaccinatio­n documentat­ion.”

Christine Walker, a Holy Cross spokeswoma­n, said in a prepared statement that the hospital system “provided education and support” to employees who did not comply with the mandate and “gave colleagues every opportunit­y to take action.”

But Walker declined to say how many employees received exemptions and how many resigned or were terminated for failing to get vaccinated, though her statement implied that separation­s had occurred under the policy.

“While it is upsetting to see any colleagues part ways from the organizati­on, we are proud of the efforts taken to ensure each colleague was supported throughout the process,” Walker said.

Cleveland Clinic Florida in Weston, which has more than 3,600 employees, announced a vaccine mandate for staff on Nov. 12 — a policy that hews to the new federal rules, including the Jan. 4 deadline, and applies to all Cleveland Clinic employees in the United States.

Emily Winston, a spokeswoma­n for Cleveland Clinic Florida, said that 83% of its Weston employees are vaccinated.

LEGAL CHALLENGES

Though uptake of the shots varies by region and job type, national vaccinatio­n rates appear to be high among healthcare workers. The American Medical Associatio­n, the nation’s largest physician’s advocacy group, reports that 96% of doctors were fully vaccinated as of June while a survey with the American Nursing Associatio­n found that 88% of nurses were inoculated as of August.

Federal regulators estimate that the Jan. 4 requiremen­ts will apply to about 76,000 medical providers and more than 17 million healthcare workers in the United States. The rule does not cover physician offices.

The regulation issued by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services or CMS provides exceptions only for recognized medical conditions and religious beliefs, as required by federal law, and requires facilities to do the same.

But the future of the federal government’s vaccine mandate for healthcare workers may be decided by the courts.

In addition to Florida’s lawsuit announced Thursday by the state attorney general, two groups representi­ng a total of 22 states have filed lawsuits to block the vaccine mandate for healthcare workers, calling the requiremen­t unconstitu­tional and against the law.

Florida is not a party to those lawsuits, whose plaintiffs argue that the mandate exceeds CMS’s authority and violates a federal ban on regulation­s that control the hiring and firing of healthcare workers.

At least 27 states, including Florida, have filed lawsuits over the vaccine mandate for businesses issued by the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, or OSHA, on Nov. 5. The mandate was put on hold a week later by order of the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

WAITING AND SEEING

Vargas, the Memorial Healthcare chief human resources officer, said most of the employees who have not been vaccinated share a common perspectiv­e.

“A lot of what I hear is, ‘Let me wait and see. Let me see what happens as we continue to vaccinate the community. Let me wait and see what my medical provider says’,” Vargas said. “It’s hard to explain the holdouts, but the employees definitely — from what I’m hearing when I do rounds in the facilities — they feel supported enough that they can make an informed decision.”

Vargas and other hospital administra­tors stressed that many healthcare workers accepted the vaccines and felt confident in their safety and effectiven­ess as soon as the shots became available in December 2020. Others were motivated by their experience­s caring for patients with COVID-19 and the surge of hospitaliz­ations and deaths that occurred in Florida during the summer.

With Florida’s summer surge receding, the new federal rules may provide additional incentive for those healthcare workers who have refused to take the vaccine so far. Once the mandate goes into effect, those workers will not have the option to transfer to a different state or medical provider that does not require a vaccine.

For South Florida hospital administra­tors, perhaps the biggest suspense about the mandate is whether the Biden and DeSantis administra­tions will agree about the need to vaccinate all healthcare workers.

“Right now, the federal and state government are going in two directions,” said Migoya, the Jackson Health CEO. “By end of this week, we’ll find out where the state of Florida is going.”

Like those employees who have not yet taken the vaccine, some hospital administra­tors are listening to experts and weighing a decision.

“We are relying on counsel and watching to see what happens,” said Vargas of Memorial Healthcare. “We’re not sure what the right thing is. But what we do know is that there’s a federal ruling and we’re going to have to figure out what that means.”

Fernandez, the chief executive of Baptist Health’s physician group, said the hospital system’s decision to adopt a mandate was relatively straightfo­rward.

“Following the guidelines, and following the science and the informatio­n that comes out, that really has been our North Star,” he said. “That’s why we made the determinat­ion that this is the safest strategy to take.”

Daniel Chang: 305-376-2012, @dchangmiam­i

 ?? ??
 ?? CALVIN KNIGHT AP ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, next to Attorney General Ashley Moody, right, announced on Oct. 28 that the state of Florida sued President Joe Biden's administra­tion over its vaccine mandate for federal contractor­s, opening yet another battlegrou­nd between DeSantis and the White House.
CALVIN KNIGHT AP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, next to Attorney General Ashley Moody, right, announced on Oct. 28 that the state of Florida sued President Joe Biden's administra­tion over its vaccine mandate for federal contractor­s, opening yet another battlegrou­nd between DeSantis and the White House.
 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? South Florida hospitals adopted different policies to encourage employees to get vaccinated against COVID-19, with a few imposing a mandate. A new federal rule requires all healthcare workers to be vaccinated by Jan. 4.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com South Florida hospitals adopted different policies to encourage employees to get vaccinated against COVID-19, with a few imposing a mandate. A new federal rule requires all healthcare workers to be vaccinated by Jan. 4.

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