Los Angeles Times

Healthcare workers request to skip shots

Thousands in San Diego County seek COVID-19 vaccine exemptions. Most cite religious reasons.

- By Paul Sisson

SAN DIEGO — A recent survey of San Diego County medical providers found that thousands were requesting vaccinatio­n mandate exemptions, with most citing religious reasons.

President Biden’s new COVID-19 vaccinatio­n mandate requires all federal workers and contractor­s, including all healthcare workers in the nation, to receive their shots or lose their jobs.

But administra­tion officials said last week that the new federal vaccinatio­n program would allow anyone to request an exemption on “narrow” religious grounds or if they had a qualifying disability, loopholes that are similar in California, which announced a vaccinatio­n mandate for healthcare workers on Aug. 5 that takes effect Sept. 30.

Sharp HealthCare, San Diego’s largest health system, reported that it had received more than 700 religious exemption requests, with UC San Diego Health receiving 610 and Scripps Health more than 400. Those numbers represent about 3% of each organizati­on’s total workforce, about 16,000 to 22,000 workers.

Kaiser Permanente San Diego and Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego did not indicate how many of their employees had filled out exemption forms, but Palomar Health in northern San Diego County said it had received only 22.

Dr. Ghazala Sharieff, corporate senior vice president and chief medical officer at Scripps, said concerns around stem cells and vaccine developmen­t had been the most commonly cited reason for a religious exemption.

“We’re also getting our share of people saying, ‘My body is my temple,’ ” Sharieff said.

Brett McClain, Sharp’s chief operating officer, said that sounded familiar.

“I’d say 90-plus percent of our religious exemptions are citing Christian reasons around the stem cells,” McClain said. “The rest are along the lines of, ‘I’m in control of my body.’ ”

Malia Wylie, a medical assistant in the orthopedic­s department of a large San Diego County medical provider that she declined to name, said she recently had received a religious exemption, though getting approval required her to be persistent.

“In my religion, what my conscience tells me is to go forth the way I would like to have my body as a temple,” she said. “I don’t believe in the fetal cells that they have made these vaccines with.

“The ingredient­s, I don’t fall in line with them. The long-term side effects have yet to be determined.”

Scientists, though, have repeatedly indicated that long-term side effects are not generally associated with vaccines. Most appear within two months of administra­tion.

As for the stem cell issue, a plethora of scientific sources from across the globe say the same thing: Yes, stem cells derived from elective abortions in the 1960s and 1970s were used in “proof of concept” research early on in the research process for the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna mRNA vaccines, but the vaccines do not contain any stem cell material.

Cells collected decades ago can be cultured, allowing them to continue growing indefinite­ly, providing a source of human cells that is used throughout biomedical research. The cells in use today, though, are many generation­s removed from those that were originally obtained after elective abortions.

After considerin­g the evidence, and studying the vaccines in detail, the Vatican said in a statement Dec. 17 that “all vaccinatio­ns recognized as clinically safe and effective can be used in good conscience with the certain knowledge that the use of such vaccines does not constitute formal cooperatio­n with the abortion from which the cells used in production of the vaccines derive.”

The Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the United States Southern Baptist Convention made a similar statement Dec. 15.

Wylie said she was a nondenomin­ational Christian, adding that her church, which she declined to name but said she attended regularly, supports her choice to file for and receive an exemption.

Healthcare providers must now decide whether to grant such requests.

It’s an adjudicati­on, Sharieff said, that has no clear rules. How does a company whose mission is healing its patients judge whose professed religious reservatio­ns are sincere and whose are not?

“We are going to need some clarificat­ion from the state on how to handle this situation, but we have not received any yet,” Sharieff said.

McClain said he was not holding out hope of receiving marching orders from regulators, and that likely means that many religious exemption requests will simply be approved.

“It will likely be us making the decision based on what’s presented to us,” he said, “and it’s going to be hard for us to get in the way of someone’s professed religious belief.”

The state mandate requires those in healthcare who are granted exemptions to undergo coronaviru­s testing twice per week if they work in clinical roles and to wear masks.

Asked whether such guidance will be forthcomin­g, the California Department of Public Health said in a statement that it had no plans to further clarify what constitute­d a valid religious exemption, noting that the state’s order “does not limit employers from imposing stricter requiremen­ts.”

The California Hospital Assn. said in an email that although the religious exemption requests are likely “happening across the state,” the organizati­on does not have “any data or insights on the matter.”

It is not at all clear that California hospitals can afford to deny exemption requests even if they see clear reason to do so. All are caught up in staffing shortages driven by pandemic fatigue, a surge in demand for services and the recent migration of the nation’s temporary healthcare workforce to Southern states where the COVID-19 pandemic has been more fierce.

Medical exemption requests are also a valid reason to remain unvaccinat­ed, though there can be more hard and fast, science-based reasons around which conditions qualify.

Sharp, McClain said, has received 100 medical exemption requests in addition to the 700 based on religious beliefs. But campaigns to get employees vaccinated have simultaneo­usly been relatively successful, pushing the organizati­on’s overall vaccinatio­n rate from 80% to 88%.

The truly worrisome group, he added, are the roughly 1,300 employees who have not yet proved that they are vaccinated and who have not filed for an exemption. After Sept. 30, he said, the state mandate will require those employees, who work in clinical and nonclinica­l roles, to be put on unpaid administra­tive leave.

They would have a month to get vaccinated before suffering the ultimate career consequenc­e.

“Based on the state’s orders, after that, their employment will be terminated,” McClain said. “That will be a difficult situation for sure because we are already at a difficult point with staffing in a lot of different ways.”

 ?? Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune ?? KERI COLIO is vaccinated against COVID-19 in December, as healthcare workers began to receive their first doses. Some 3% of employees at surveyed health systems in San Diego County are now seeking exemptions.
Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune KERI COLIO is vaccinated against COVID-19 in December, as healthcare workers began to receive their first doses. Some 3% of employees at surveyed health systems in San Diego County are now seeking exemptions.

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