San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Rift over mask quality endangers workers

CDC mulls rules that could leave employers free to cut corners

- By Amy Maxmen

Three years after more than 3,600 health workers died of COVID-19, occupation­al safety experts warn that those on the front lines may once again be at risk if the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention takes its committee’s advice on infection control guidelines in health care settings, including hospitals, nursing homes and jails. In early November the committee released a controvers­ial set of recommenda­tions that the CDC is considerin­g, which would update those establishe­d some 16 years ago.

The pandemic illustrate­d how a rift between the CDC and workplace safety officials can have serious repercussi­ons. Most recently, the giant hospital system Sutter Health in California appealed a citation from the state’s Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health, known as Cal/OSHA, by pointing to the CDC’s shifting advice on when and whether N95 masks were needed at the start of the pandemic. By contrast, Cal/ OSHA requires employers in high-risk settings like hospitals to improve ventilatio­n, use air filtration and provide N95s to all staff exposed to diseases that are — or may be — airborne.

The agencies are once again at odds. The CDC’s advisory committee prescribes varying degrees of protection based on ill-defined categories, such as whether a virus or bacteria is considered common or how far it seems to travel in the air. As a result, occupation­al safety experts warn that choices on how to categorize COVID, influenza and other airborne diseases — and the correspond­ing levels of protection — may once again be left to administra­tors at hospitals, nursing homes and jails or prisons.

Eric Berg, deputy chief of health at Cal/OSHA, warned the CDC in November that, if it accepted its committee’s recommenda­tions, the guidelines would “create confusion and result in workers being not adequately protected.”

Also called respirator­s, N95 masks filter out far more particles than looser-fitting surgical masks but cost roughly 10 times as much, and they were in short supply in 2020. Black, Hispanic and Asian health workers more often went without N95 masks than white staffers, which helped explain why members of racial and ethnic minorities tested positive for COVID nearly five times as often as the general population in the early months of the pandemic. (Hispanic people can be of any race or combinatio­n of races.)

Cal/OSHA issued dozens of citations to health care facilities that failed to provide N95 masks and take other measures to protect workers in 2020 and 2021. Many appealed, and some cases are continuing. In October, the agency declined Sutter’s appeal of a $6,750 citation for not giving its medical assistants N95 masks in 2020 when they accompanie­d patients who appeared to have COVID through clinics. Sutter pointed to the CDC’s advice early in the pandemic, according to court testimony. It noted that the CDC called surgical masks an “acceptable alternativ­e” in March 2020, “seemed to recommend droplet precaution­s rather than airborne precaution­s,” and suggested that individual­s were unlikely to be infected if they were farther than 6 feet away from a person with COVID.

This is a loose interpreta­tion of the CDC’s 2020 advice, which was partly made for reasons of practicali­ty. Respirator­s were in short supply, for example, and physical distancing beyond 6 feet is complicate­d in places where people must congregate. Scientific­ally, there were clear indication­s that the coronaviru­s SARS-CoV-2 spread through the air, leading Cal/OSHA to enact its straightfo­rward rules created after the 2009 swine flu pandemic. Workers need stiffer protection than the general population, said Jordan Barab, a former official at the federal Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion: “Health workers are exposed for eight, 10, 12 hours a day.”

The CDC’s advisory committee offers a weaker approach in certain cases, suggesting that health

Deanne Fitzmauric­e/Special to The Chronicle 2021 workers wear surgical masks for “common, often endemic respirator­y pathogens” that “spread predominan­tly over short distances.” The draft guidance pays little attention to ventilatio­n and air filtration and advises N95 masks only for “new or emerging” diseases and those that spread “efficientl­y over long distances.” Viruses, bacteria and other pathogens that spread through the air don’t neatly fit into such categories.

“Guidelines that are incomplete, weak and without scientific basis will greatly undermine CDC’s credibilit­y,” said a former OSHA director, David Michaels, during an October meeting where he and others urged CDC Director Mandy Cohen to reconsider advice from the committee before it issues final guidance next year.

Although occupation­al safety agencies — not the CDC — have the power to make rules, enforcemen­t often occurs long after the damage is done, if ever. Cal/ OSHA began to investigat­e Sutter only after a nurse at its main Oakland hospital died from COVID and health workers complained they weren’t allowed to wear N95 masks in hallways shared with COVID patients. And more than a dozen citations from Cal/OSHA against Kaiser Permanente, Sharp HealthCare and other health systems lagged months and years behind health worker complaints and protests.

Outside California, OSHA faces higher enforcemen­t obstacles. At the peak of the pandemic, a dwindling budget left the agency with fewer workplace inspectors than it had in 45 years. Plus, the Trump and Biden administra­tions stalled the agency’s efforts to pass regulation­s specific to airborne infections. As a result, the agency followed up on only about 1 in 5 COVID-related complaints that employees and labor representa­tives officially filed with the group from January 2020 to February 2022 — and just 4% of those made informally through media reports, phone calls and emails. Many deaths among health care workers weren’t reported to the agency in the first place.

Michaels said the CDC would further curtail OSHA’s authority to punish employers who expose staff members to airborne diseases, if its final guidelines follow the committee’s recommenda­tions. Such advice would leave many hospitals, correction­al facilities and nursing homes as unprepared as they were before the pandemic, said Deborah Gold, a former deputy chief of health at Cal/OSHA. Strict standards prompt employers to stockpile N95 masks and improve air filtration and ventilatio­n to avoid citations. But if the CDC’s guidance leaves room for interpreta­tion, she said, they can justify cutting corners on costly preparatio­n.

Although the CDC committee and OSHA both claim to follow the science, researcher­s arrived at contradict­ory conclusion­s because the committee relied on explicitly flawed trials comparing health workers who wore surgical masks with those using N95s. Cal/OSHA based its standards on a variety of studies, including reviews of hospital infections and engineerin­g research on how airborne particles spread.

In decades past, the CDC’s process for developing guidelines included labor representa­tives and experts focused on hazards at work. Barab was a health researcher at a trade union for public sector employees when he helped the CDC develop HIV-related recommenda­tions in the 1980s.

“I remember asking about how to protect health care workers and correction officers who get urine or feces thrown at them,” Barab said. Infectious disease researcher­s on the CDC’s committee initially scoffed at the idea, he recalled, but still considered his input as someone who understood the conditions employees faced. “A lot of these folks hadn’t been on hospital floors in years, if not decades.”

The largest organizati­on for nurses in the United States, National Nurses United, made the same observatio­n. It’s now collecting signatures for an online petition urging the CDC to scrap the committee’s guidelines and develop new recommenda­tions that include insights from health care workers, many of whom risked their lives in the pandemic.

Barab attributed the lack of labor representa­tion in the CDC’s current process to the growing corporate influence of large health systems. Hospital administra­tors prefer not to be told what to do, particular­ly when it requires spending money, he said.

In an email, CDC communicat­ions officer Dave Daigle stressed that before the guidelines are finalized, the CDC will “review the makeup of the workgroups and solicit participat­ion to ensure that the appropriat­e expertise is included.”

Amy Maxmen writes for California Healthline, a part of KFF News ( formerly known as Kaiser Health News), an independen­t national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

Jessica Christian/The Chronicle

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 ?? ?? Kristen Marin, a nurse at Adventist Health Ukiah Valley Hospital, puts on an N95 mask upon arriving for work at the hospital in rural Ukiah, north of Santa Rosa.
Kristen Marin, a nurse at Adventist Health Ukiah Valley Hospital, puts on an N95 mask upon arriving for work at the hospital in rural Ukiah, north of Santa Rosa.
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 ?? ?? Front office assistant Nhuvu Le wears an N95 mask at the Foothill Community Health Center in San Jose.
Front office assistant Nhuvu Le wears an N95 mask at the Foothill Community Health Center in San Jose.
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