Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

HEALTH NETWORK IN PA. LET EMPLOYEES’ FAMILIES SKIP COVID-19 VACCINATIO­N LINE

- BY MICHAEL RUBINKAM

One of Pennsylvan­ia’s largest health networks allowed employees’ family members to skip the COVID-19 vaccine line, raising questions of fairness at a time of strong public demand and scarce supply.

Geisinger’s decision to give special access to employees’ relatives got it a rebuke from the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health, which said the health care giant shouldn’t have held vaccine clinics for eligible family members of employees.

“DOH has been in contact with the provider to ensure that going forward they follow the agreement they signed or risk losing access to first doses of COVID-19 vaccine,” said Maggi Barton, a Health Department spokeswoma­n.

The state agency said it was unaware that Geisinger had arranged for family members to be inoculated until informed by The Associated Press.

Geisinger said that, since the family members who got the shots met the state’s eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, it didn’t need to tell the health department that it had set aside vaccine for them.

Geisinger also said it had followed state guidelines for vaccine eligibilit­y and administra­tion and that “at no time were we informed that our vaccine program could be at risk.”

Geisinger, which has 24,000 employees in central and northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, held employee vaccinatio­n clinics on three Sundays in late January and early February. Each employee was permitted to bring two family members as long as they were eligible under the state’s phased vaccine rollout.

Family members did not have to live with the employee to qualify, the health system said.

About 3,600 relatives of Geisinger employees were vaccinated under the program. No additional vaccine clinics for employee family members are scheduled.

“The situation in mid-January was very different than where we stand today,” Geisinger spokesman Matthew Van Stone said.

At the time, he said, Geisinger had an adequate supply of vaccine, and “we felt opening up Sundays to employees and up to two Phase 1A-eligible family members would make it easier for the community to find appointmen­ts throughout the week.”

It’s unclear whether anyone lost out on appointmen­ts because of doses given to employees’ relatives.

But the vaccine clinics allowed family members to avoid the difficult hunt for an appointmen­t that has plagued the state’s early rollout and led to widespread complaints. Pennsylvan­ia has been among the nation’s lowest-ranked states in terms of how efficientl­y it is vaccinatin­g its population.

“Even if their intentions were good, we shouldn’t be using vaccines as a ‘friends and family’ perk of employment,” said Gabriel Lázaro-Muñoz, a professor in the Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy at Baylor College of Medicine.

The health system, which runs nine hospitals and a 550,000-member health plan, gave family members a leg up at the same time that newly expanded eligibilit­y rules prompted a statewide surge in demand.

Linda Thorne, 65, who works in her family’s pizzeria, said she has been trying for weeks to get an appointmen­t with Geisinger, but the health system isn’t scheduling firstdose appointmen­ts now.

“It’s really frustratin­g,” Thorne said. “I don’t think it’s fair.”

Other major health networks, including UPMC and Penn State Health, said they do not make separate arrangemen­ts for employees’ relatives to get vaccinated.

The health department said that although Geisinger did not violate its provider agreement with the state, “We would hope providers would not prioritize employee families over community members who are also eligible.”

Federal guidelines say people in the same class of eligibilit­y should have equal opportunit­y to get the shots. The guidelines also say that no one should be disadvanta­ged “because of social position or other socially determined circumstan­ces.”

 ?? MARK MORAN/AP FILE ?? A nurse holds signs honoring first-responders and front-line workers from Commonweal­th Health General Hospital, Geisinger South, Geisinger Wyoming Valley and the Veterans Administra­tion Medical Center last May in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvan­ia.
MARK MORAN/AP FILE A nurse holds signs honoring first-responders and front-line workers from Commonweal­th Health General Hospital, Geisinger South, Geisinger Wyoming Valley and the Veterans Administra­tion Medical Center last May in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvan­ia.

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