New York Becomes First State to Mandate COVID-19 Boosters for Healthcare Workers

January 8, 2022 in News by RBN Staff

By Jack Phillips

 

January 7, 2022 Updated: January 7, 2022

Health care workers tend to a Covid-19 patient in a Covid holding pod at Providence St. Mary Medical Center in Apple Valley, California on January 11, 2021. – As Covid-19 tears through southern California, small hospitals in rural towns like Apple Valley have been overwhelmed, with coronavirus patients crammed into hallways, makeshift ICU beds and even the pediatric ward. When AFP visited St Mary hospital in this desert town of 70,000 people this week, palliative care supervisor Kari McGuire said her team were seeing “astronomical numbers of patients who are dying” from the novel coronavirus. (Photo by ARIANA DREHSLER / AFP) (Photo by ARIANA DREHSLER/AFP via Getty Images)

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said the state will expand its COVID-19 vaccine mandate for healthcare workers to include booster shots, becoming the first state to require boosters for healthcare employees while also signaling that a growing number of institutions are increasingly aiming to mandate them.

Hochul, a Democrat, said in a Friday news briefing that state healthcare workers are required to get the extra shots. The state will accept only medical—not religious—exemptions, consistent with previous mandates on COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 vaccines.

Under the mandate, healthcare workers will have to get boosters within two weeks of their eligibility. Recently, the Food and Drug Administration recommended shortening the time an individual needs to wait before getting a Pfizer or Moderna booster by one month. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention signed off on the FDA’s Pfizer recommendation earlier this week.

“They work [with our] most vulnerable New Yorkers. We need to make sure that our health care workers are now booster … not just vaccinated, but they have to be boosted,” Hochul said during the briefing. Hochul said that New York is the first state in the country to mandate boosters for healthcare workers.

Hochul says New York Health Commissioner Dr. Mary Bassett will recommend the booster mandate to the Public Health and Health Planning Council on Tuesday, Jan. 11, for final approval, although both Hochul and Bassett said they both expect the Council to sign off on it.

“This has been such an important priority,” Hochul said. “We’ve already seen what’s been happening in our healthcare environments. Staff is getting sick, they’re leaving. We need them to get well, we need them to have the best fortification they possibly can, and that means getting a booster shot as well.”

The vaccine mandate for healthcare staff has been challenged several times in court, with one making it all the way to the Supreme Court. In December, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in refusing to halt the vaccine mandate, with Justices Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas, and Samuel Alito dissenting.

Other than New York, Maine and Rhode Island are states that do not accommodate religious exemptions for healthcare workers who object to getting the shot.

“Today, the Court repeats the mistake by turning away New York’s doctors and nurses,” Gorsuch wrote in his dissent on a Maine vaccine case. “We do all this even though the State’s executive decree clearly interferes with the free exercise of religion—and does so seemingly based on nothing more than fear and anger at those who harbor unpopular religious beliefs.”

In recent weeks, businesses and schools have begun to require booster doses as a requirement for employment or enrollment. As an example, Danny Meyer, the CEO of the Union Square Hospitality Group, told outlets last month that his businesses would require boosters for employees.