http://symptomsofwestnilevirusinadults.com/latest-news-flu-shots-get-the-flu-shot-healthcare-workers-and-getting-the-flu-shot/
As a nurse at a Downey hospital, Darlene Andres spends her days
caring for postpartum mothers and their newborn babies. Andres urges new
moms to get the flu vaccine before leaving.
But Andres, 36, decided not to get the flu shot herself. Andres — a
self-proclaimed “germ freak” — said she just washes her hands instead.
“I heard from a lot of co-workers on the floors that they were
getting a lot of symptoms after getting the flu vaccine,” she said. “I
kind of got scared.”
On Friday, public health officials warned that the flu wreaking havoc
elsewhere has finally arrived in California and is now causing
widespread hospitalizations across the state. The increase in illnesses
so early could signal a worse flu season than in years past.
As flu cases increase, hospital administrators are grappling with
whether to compel doctors, nurses and other medical staff to get
vaccinated. Each year, only about 60% of hospital workers get the shot,
according to a report by the California Department of Public Health. The
federal government has set a goal of 90% by 2020.
State and federal health officials said Friday that it’s important
for healthcare workers to get immunized because their jobs put them in a
position to spread the virus to large numbers of patients. Moreover,
hospitals need them to stay well during the busy flu season.
“The flu is particularly severe, particularly deadly among folks that
have underlying conditions, and these are the very folks you find in
hospitals,” said Gil Chavez, deputy director of the center for
infectious diseases for the California Department of Public Health.
Under state law, hospitals must offer the shot to their employees
free of charge and workers must sign a declaration if they don’t want
it. But no law mandates medical centers to require their staff to get
vaccinated. That has led to a hodgepodge of rules around the state.
“What is happening right now is that there is an unfortunate patchwork of policies,” said Jan Emerson-Shea, spokeswoman for the California Hospital Assn., which supports a vaccination requirement for healthcare workers. “In some hospitals, patients may be …
more at risk.”
Administrators have made vaccination a condition of employment at
some facilities. At others, they instruct employees to get the shot or
wear a mask for the entire flu season. Many simply hold education
sessions on the flu vaccine — such as debunking the widespread myth that
it causes the illness — and encourage staff members to get it.
Several county public health officials have taken the matter into
their own hands, issuing orders that healthcare facilities must require
their workers to get the vaccine. Officials disagree whether nursing
homes and residential homes for the disabled or elderly also should be
subject to the mandate — even though older people can be especially at
risk.
Sonoma County’s health officer, Lynn Silver Chalfin, said she decided
to issue an order because vaccination rates were too low. “We needed to
take action,” she said. “It’s really important for healthcare
institutions to be safe places for their patients.” read full article above link.
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