Boston Herald

Hospital to stop stork visits

Won’t deliver babies after unvaxxed staff quit

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LOWVILLE, N.Y. — An upstate New York hospital will stop delivering babies later this month, in part because of employee resignatio­ns over a requiremen­t they be vaccinated against COVID-19.

Six maternity staff members resigned from Lewis County General Hospital so far this month, worsening an existing staff shortage, the Watertown Daily Times reported. The department has seven other unvaccinat­ed employees who also could decide to leave, hospital officials said.

“The number of resignatio­ns received leaves us no choice but to pause delivering babies at Lewis County General Hospital,” Chief Executive Gerald Cayer said at a news conference late last week. “It is my hope that the (state) Department of Health will work with us in pausing the service rather than closing the maternity department.”

Services also may have to be curtailed in five other department­s if staff members resign rather than be vaccinated by the state’s Sept. 27 deadline for health care workers, authoritie­s said.

About 165 unvaccinat­ed employees, 73% of whom provide clinical services, have yet to declare their intention to stay or go, Cayer said. The county-owned health system employs about 650 people.

Cayer said 30 people have resigned since the vaccine mandate was announced last month, most of whom held clinical positions like nurses, therapists and technician­s. Thirty others have gotten at least one dose of the vaccine, he said.

“Essential health services are not at risk because of the mandate,” Cayer said. “The mandate ensures we will have a healthy workforce and we are not responsibl­e for (causing COVID-19) transmissi­on in or out of our facilities.”

The health care system’s nursing home has seen one resignatio­n, but 48 people have yet to take action, he said.

The maternity “pause” will begin on Sept. 25.

In Massachuse­tts, the Baker administra­tion has issued a vaccine mandate for workers in rest homes, skilled nursing facilities, assisted living residences and hospice programs and home care workers who provide in-home direct care.

The Massachuse­tts governor is also requiring all executive branch employees get their shots, a mandate that covers about 45,000 state workers.

Many hospitals in Massachuse­tts are also requiring their workforces to get immunized against COVID-19 but they’re not covered by Baker’s mandate.

A larger federal push however may affect hospitals. The Biden administra­tion last week said it will require companies with more than 100 workers to give their employees shots or test them weekly. Biden is also mandating shots for all federal executive branch workers and federal contractor­s with no testing opt-out. Those new requiremen­ts could cover 100 million Americans.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? SERVICES CUT: An upstate New York hospital will stop delivering babies later this month due to staff shortages.
GETTY IMAGES FILE SERVICES CUT: An upstate New York hospital will stop delivering babies later this month due to staff shortages.

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