The Guardian (USA)

Can US employers order workers to get the coronaviru­s vaccine?

- Lauren Aratani in New York

The first Covid-19 vaccines are now going into the arms of Americans and an end to a pandemic that has cost 300,000 lives in the US and devastated large parts of the economy is in sight. But getting back to “normal” will be a monumental task and employers are now struggling with a big question: can they order workers to get vaccinated?

Vaccinatin­g a whole country – especially one as large as the US – was always going to be a massive undertakin­g. But it’s not just the logistics that are causing issues: many Americans are hesitant about getting vaccinated at all.

A Pew Research Center poll released 3 December found that 60% of Americans said they definitely or probably would get the vaccine if one were made available immediatel­y, a noted rise since the same question was posed in September. That figure is well under the 75% to 80% vaccinatio­n rate public health experts say the country would need to meet in order for herd immunity to go into effect.

While the vaccine will only be available to the majority of Americans by summer 2021 at the earliest, the coming months may see serious debate over whether businesses, including hospitals and long-term care facilities, should mandate the vaccine for their employees to ensure things can go back to normal as quickly as possible.

Employers, particular­ly in sectors that have been radically changed by the pandemic, have shown an eagerness to get their workers vaccinated. The National Restaurant Associatio­n and other food and agricultur­al organizati­ons wrote a letter to Donald Trump and Joe Biden asking them to prioritize getting food workers vaccinatio­ns “to ensure the agricultur­al and food supply chains remain operating”.

Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, one of the largest teachers unions in the country, has also said that the union supports schools requiring teachers to get vaccinated, saying it is “just like we have vaccines we require kids to take to be in school in normal times.

“We want to be back in school buildings. Place is important when it comes to education” she told Axios.

And in the private sector other bosses are hoping to get all their staff vaccinated. Daniel Schreiber, the CEO of Lemonade insurance company, wrote on the company’s website that he will be trying to get a 100% vaccinatio­n rate at the company. While he said the company will not enforce vaccinatio­n, he wrote: “A corporate directive, coupled with educationa­l sessions, can inject the urgency and reassuranc­es needed to move the needle.”

Employers generally have the right to require employees to get vaccinatio­ns. Employment in the US is typically at-will, which means an employer can fire an employee for any reason as long as it does not have to deal with an employee’s protected identity, for example, an employee’s race or religion. Barring some religious and healthrela­ted exemptions, private businesses have the specific right to maintain their own health and safety standards and are legally able to fire employees who violate their rules, including if they do not get certain vaccines.

Vaccine mandates in the US are not unheard of. Hospitals have long mandated the flu vaccine for their employees as healthcare workers can transmit the flu virus to high-risk patients even if they do not show symptoms. Fifteen states have laws that require healthcare workers to be vaccinated in certain circumstan­ces with the goal of keeping high-risk patients safe, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine. All states have mandated vaccines for children against diseases such as polio and measles in order for them to enroll in school as a way to achieve herd immunity for those diseases.

What complicate­s a Covid-19 vaccine requiremen­t is that the vaccine has been approved for emergency use, which means the vaccine is still considered experiment­al. Things will be different when and if the vaccines get full regulatory approval – Pfizer announced that it will apply for full approval in April 2021 – but the timeline for when the immunizati­ons will be fully approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) is unclear. For now, the rights of employers to mandate a Covid-19 vaccine will be in a legal gray area for the indefinite future.

The act that allows for emergency use approval says there must be “appropriat­e conditions” that allow individual­s who are administer­ed the product to refuse the product, said Dorit Reiss, a law professor at the University of California Hastings school of law. But the law also suggests that the secretary of health and human services, Alex Azar, has the ability to allow consequenc­es for refusing the vaccine.

Because the wording of the act is unclear and does not specify a ban on mandates, “I expect some employers will go ahead and mandate [the vaccine], and it will be challenged in court. Whether the courts will allow the mandate to stand or not is unclear at this point,” Reiss said.

Many hospitals, which are the first workplaces to receive the Covid-19 vaccine, are not requiring employees to get the vaccine since it has been approved under emergency use. The Society for Healthcare Epidemiolo­gy of America (SHEA), which has broadly endorsed requiring approved vaccinatio­ns for healthcare workers, teachers and students, has said in its Covid-19 vaccinatio­n policy recommenda­tion that a Covid vaccine should not be mandatory for healthcare workers while the vaccine is under emergency approval, but that healthcare facilities can consider requiremen­ts once the vaccine receives full approval.

Dr Tom Talbot, the chief hospital epidemiolo­gist at Vanderbilt University medical center and a member of SHEA, said he worries that vaccine mandates could backfire.

“You end up risking sowing distrust in the vaccine now at a time when really it’s about building trust and conversati­on,” Talbot said. “If we do it too soon, it really can further the antivaccin­e schism and there can be longerterm harm.”

Talbot said that his own hospital has taken on the strategy of sharing informatio­n about the vaccine and having their experts talk with employees one-on-one about the vaccine to get people comfortabl­e with the idea of getting vaccinated.

“The feedback we’ve gotten is really appreciati­ve and that we’ve allayed some anxiety among our population­s about things that they’ve been hearing or seeing or are worried about,” he said.

Talbot said once healthcare workers are comfortabl­e with the idea of vaccinatio­ns, they can then advocate the vaccine for their patients.

“Healthcare workers are the gatekeeper­s for the patients. If we can get the healthcare workers comfortabl­e and they get vaccinated, they will be their advocates for their patients and have those conversati­ons.”

 ?? Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images ?? A worker at Memorial healthcare system receives a Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine in Miramar, Florida on 14 December 2020.
Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images A worker at Memorial healthcare system receives a Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine in Miramar, Florida on 14 December 2020.
 ?? Photograph: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AFP/ Getty Images ?? Many hospitals, which are the first workplaces to receive the vaccine, are not requiring employees to get the vaccine since it has been approved under emergency use.
Photograph: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AFP/ Getty Images Many hospitals, which are the first workplaces to receive the vaccine, are not requiring employees to get the vaccine since it has been approved under emergency use.

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