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Post-infection immunity was very protective against Delta, the C.D.C. reports, but vaccines still offer the best defense.

Post-infection immunity was very protective against Delta, the C.D.C. reports, but vaccines still offer the best defense.
ImageMedical staff at Western Reserve Hospital in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio.
Credit…Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

Health care workers in 24 U.S. states must be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus by March 15 after a Supreme Court decision last week, a ruling that has left some already understaffed hospital systems bracing to possibly lose workers just as the highly contagious Omicron variant is inundating them with patients.

The new guidance, which was issued on Friday by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services after the court upheld President Biden’s vaccine mandate for health care workers, will affect about 10 million people at about 76,000 health care facilities participating in the Medicaid and Medicare program, including hospitals and long-term care facilities.

Experts say mandates are effective in persuading more people to become vaccinated, which they say is essential to helping prevent the spread of the virus.

A spokesperson for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said on Tuesday that the guidance meant health care workers in 24 states where vaccine mandates were not yet in effect must have at least one coronavirus vaccine shot within 30 days of Friday’s guidance, and they must be fully vaccinated by March 15.

The states affected are Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming. For these states, the federal vaccine requirement had been blocked by a lower court.

The guidance does not yet apply to Texas, where a preliminary injunction still prevents such requirements.

The Supreme Court’s decision does not affect timelines already in place for the other 25 states, Washington, D.C., and U.S. territories, and where health care workers must by fully vaccinated by Feb. 28, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

The requirements come as hospitals across the country are being pushed to their limits by rising cases, many health care workers are falling ill with the virus and others who quit under the pressure of the pandemic have not been replaced.

Local and regional hospitals, as well as multistate hospital chains, have wrestled with resistance among some nurses and other staff to the Covid vaccines. Many of the larger groups, including the Cleveland Clinic and HCA Healthcare, suspended their own vaccination mandates last month while they awaited the Supreme Court’s decision.

While a study by federal researchers found that 30 percent of hospital workers were not fully vaccinated as of mid-September, overall immunization rates rose in the following months as mandates took effect.

Some health care systems, such as HCA Healthcare, have acknowledged that the mandate could pose a challenge. HCA Healthcare, which employees about 275,000 workers, said in a statement last week that if workers refused to be vaccinated, that “could compromise our ability to serve our communities and provide care to patients under the Medicare and Medicaid programs.”

A spokesman for HCA added that more than 90 percent of its workers were vaccinated or had qualified for an exemption.

Although there are signs that new cases have peaked in some Northeastern states, such as New York, they remain dangerously high across the country. And hospitalizations nationwide have broken records.

Dr. Josh Sharfstein, vice dean of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health whose work focuses on promoting public health strategies, said the policy could create “potential challenges in the short term” with hospitals that are short-staffed.

“It may require some flexibility to get through this period,” he said, “but that doesn’t make the underlying policy less than a good idea.”

Dr. Peter Hotez, a pediatrician and scientist at the Baylor College of Medicine who studies vaccines, said the mandate was the best way to keep medical workers healthy.

“Vaccines represent the most assured way to keep the health care work force, actually in the health care work force,” he wrote in an email.

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/01/19/world/omicron-covid-vaccine-tests/post-infection-immunity-was-very-protective-against-delta-the-cdc-reports-but-vaccines-still-offer-the-best-defense