San Diego Union-Tribune

KAISER SUSPENDS 2K WORKERS ACROSS U.S.

Employees must get vaccinated by Dec. 1 to be allowed back

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Health care giant Kaiser Permanente has put more than 2,200 employees nationwide on unpaid leave who have chosen not to get vaccinated against the coronaviru­s.

The employees have until Dec. 1 to get vaccinated to be able to return to work and those who choose not to will be terminated, the company said. Kaiser’s overall vaccinatio­n rate stands at 92 percent.

“We hope none of our employees will choose to leave their jobs rather than be vaccinated, but we won’t know with certainty until then,” Kaiser said in a statement Tuesday. “We will continue to work with this group of employees to allay concerns and educate them about the vaccines, their benefits, and risks.”

The Oakland-based company announced the vaccinatio­n requiremen­t on Aug. 2. On Aug. 5, California Gov. Gavin Newsom issued an order requiring all of the state’s roughly 2.2 million health care workers and long-term care workers to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Sept. 30.

Kaiser Permanente employs about 216,000 nationwide. Since its vaccinatio­n requiremen­t was announced, the inoculatio­n rate among employees has gone from 78 percent to 92 percent as of Tuesday, the company said.

A month after California issued its mandate, President Joe Biden ordered a sweeping federal vaccine mandate ordering companies with more than 100 workers to require vaccinatio­ns or weekly testing for the virus.

The vaccine mandates have proven successful, with many companies seeing high compliance rates.

Northwell Health, New York state’s largest health care provider, employs more than 76,000 people. It said this week it had terminated 1,400 employees — or less than 2 percent of its staff — for refusing to be vaccinated against COVID-19. The dismissed workers include clinical and non-clinical staff, the company said.

California’s order allows exceptions for people who decline the vaccine because of a religious belief or who cannot be inoculated because of a qualifying medical reason, backed up by a note signed by a licensed medical profession­al. Kaiser did not say how many exemptions it has approved for its California employees.

 ?? JAE C. HONG AP ?? Respirator­y care practition­er Raul Aguilar receives a COVID-19 vaccine at a Kaiser facility in Los Angeles. Kaiser has suspended 2,200 unvaccinat­ed employees.
JAE C. HONG AP Respirator­y care practition­er Raul Aguilar receives a COVID-19 vaccine at a Kaiser facility in Los Angeles. Kaiser has suspended 2,200 unvaccinat­ed employees.

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