The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

HHS joins vaccine trend, orders shots for its health workers

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

The federal Health and Human Services Department is requiring employees who provide care or services for patients to get their COVID-19 shots, officials announced Thursday.

The order from Secretary Xavier Becerra will affect more than 25,000 clinicians, researcher­s, contractor­s, trainees and volunteers with the National Institutes of Health, the Indian Health Service, and the U.S. Public

Health Service Commission­ed Corps. It applies to employees who regularly interact with patients or whose duties could put workers in contact with patients.

“Requiring our HHS health care workforce to get vaccinated will protect our federal workers, as well as the patients and people they serve,” Becerra said in a statement.

From the Pentagon to the Department of Veterans Affairs and the state of California, and from Google to United Airlines, government agencies and large companies are requiring employees to get vaccinated as the aggressive delta variant sweeps across the land, prompting worries that COVID-19 could drag down the economic recovery.

HHS has more than 80,000 employees. Those not covered by Becerra’s order would fall under President Joe Biden’s recent policy change that requires federal workers and contractor­s to attest to their vaccinatio­n status and imposes regular COVID-19 testing and certain workplace restrictio­ns on the unvaccinat­ed.

But this is short of a direct order to get vaccinated.

While vaccinatio­n is nearly universal among physicians, the same can’t be said for other people working in health care settings. Facilities such as nursing homes and hospitals are laborinten­sive operations relying on support staff for everything from clerical duties to transporti­ng patients, and their vaccinatio­n rates often mirror the surroundin­g communitie­s.

The decision by HHS follows the VA order last month that its health care workers get vaccinated and the recent announceme­nt by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin that U.S. service members will be required to get their COVID-19 shots in order to maintain military readiness.

Despite widespread availabili­ty of effective vaccines at no cost to patients, only about half the U.S. population is fully vaccinated. New COVID-19 cases have surged past 100,000 a day, a level not seen since the deadly wave of the fall and winter gained momentum last November.

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