List Updated Oct. 15, 2021
Major Points:
-
SILVER SPRING, MD – The American Nurses Association (ANA),
representing the interests of the nation’s 4.2 million nurses, urges the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to declare the current
and unsustainable nurse staffing shortage facing our country a national
crisis. In a letter to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra, ANA calls for the Administration to acknowledge and take concrete
action to address the current crisis-level nurse staffing shortage that
puts nurses’ ability to care for patients in jeopardy.
Over Half-Million Healthcare Workers Quit Jobs in August
-
"The data is not likely to have picked up the impact of vaccine mandates,
Newsweek noted."
-
Note: Although the workers quitting cannot be attributed solely to
vaccine mandates, it does highlight staffing shortages.
How many employees have hospitals lost to vaccine mandates? Here are the numbers so far
Fierce Healthcare
• Oct.15, 2021
Fierce Healthcare will update this list as more deadlines are reached
and hospitals share their numbers.
Albany Med has reportedly suspended 204 of its more than 11,000 employees as of
Sept. 28. They have a week to comply before facing termination.
Central Maine Healthcare has seen 84 resignations and has 250 employees with no vaccination
records as of Oct. 11. The provider said it will be temporarily suspending
some services and has been in contact with the governor's office for
support. The state's COVID-19 vaccination mandate for healthcare staff
goes into effect at the end of October.
ChristianaCare President and CEO Janice Nevin, M.D., wrote in a Sept. 27 blog post
that the system's vaccination policy resulted in the loss of approximately
150 employees, the equivalent of fewer than 90 full-time employees. Fewer
than 48 full-time equivalents provided direct patient care and fewer than 12
full-time equivalents were nurses. Nevin also noted that ChristianaCare,
which employed 13,412 during 2020, had also hired more than 200 caregivers
during the last month alone.
Erie County Medical Center had roughly 400 hospital staff who were unvaccinated by New York's
Sept. 27 deadline and placed on leave. These
employees represent about 5% of its total workforce and have
forced the hospital to halt elective inpatient surgeries and cut back on
other services.
Henry Ford Health System reported on Oct. 5 that about 400 employees had voluntarily resigned
due to the vaccination requirement, representing about 1% of the system's
total workforce. Another 1,900, about 6%, had received medical or religious
exemptions. The Detroit-based provider also noted that new hires "are
already offsetting those team members who resigned."
Hospital for Special Surgery in New York lost 18 out of 5,000 employees to vaccine resignations
and terminations.
Houston Methodist, the first to announce a vaccine mandate, said it had 153 resignations or
terminations among its roughly 26,000-person workforce.
Indiana University Health had 125 of its 35,800 employees resign from their jobs due to the
vaccine requirement. A spokesperson told Fierce Healthcare on Sept. 23 that
many were part-time workers and that the departures were the equivalent of
61 full-time employees.
Inova Health dropped 89 of its 20,000-person workforce due to noncompliance with
its Sept.1 vaccination requirement.
Kaiser Permanente announced that "just over" 2,200 employees from its nationwide
workforce of roughly 240,000 had not met its vaccine requirement and were
placed on administrative leave as of Oct. 4. The nonprofit said that the
tally is declining daily, as suspended employees have until Dec. 1 to enter
compliance and return to work.
Lewis County Health System said it has seen 30 resignations as of Sept. 11 in the wake of
announcing its vaccine mandate and as a result has been forced to pause
maternal health services. At that time, 165 of the provider’s unvaccinated
staff had not yet indicated whether they would comply or leave the
single-hospital system. Lewis County Health System employs about 650 people
and will see its mandate go into effect Sept. 27.
Maimonides Medical Center said it had 35 terminations tied to vaccination requirements. It
employee 6,500, an additional 100 of which were claiming religious exemption
as of mid-October.
MaineHealth representative Caroline Cornish told Fierce Healthcare
that 58 out of its team of 23,000 had resigned and cited the vaccination
requirement among their reasons, as of Sept. 24.
Med Center Health said it had fired 180 employees from its workforce of roughly 3,800
who had not been vaccinated by Sept. 1. It also highlighted the hiring of
178 vaccinated employees who would begin within a week of the firings.
Medical University of South Carolina Health fired five employees who had not met its June 30 vaccination or
exemption deadline. It employs more than 17,000 people.
Mohawk Valley Health System announced on Sept. 28 that New York's mandate led 180 employees,
about 5% of the workforce, to separate from the system. This has increased
its vacancy rate from 13.7% to 17.5%. The system also noted that other
unvaccinated employees have been placed on unpaid leave and have until Oct.
9 to receive a vaccine and return to their position. Hospital services are
still operating at both of the system's campuses, although service
delays and other limitations will be likely going forward.
Mount Sinai Health System has reportedly lost 1% of its 42,000-person workforce who chose not
to be vaccinated.
NYC Health + Hospitals has about 2,500 unvaccinated workers, about 5% of its 43,000 staff,
that has not met the state's vaccination requirement.
NewYork-Presbyterian had "fewer than 250" team members who did not
comply with a Sept. 22 vaccination mandate and "no longer work" at the
organization, according to a statement provided to Fierce Healthcare. The
system said it has achieved more than 99% compliance among its 48,000
employees and affiliated doctors and will see no interruptions in care due
to the mandate.
Northern Light Health representative Karen Cashman told Fierce Healthcare that, as of Sept.
24, 89 employees had left the system due to its COVID-19 vaccine
mandate. As of a Sept. 15 news conference, 91% of the system’s more
than 12,000 employees had been vaccinated.
Northwell Health has reportedly fired about 1,400 one week after New York's vaccine
mandate went into effect. This also includes at least two dozen employees at
the manager level or above that did not receive COVID-19 vaccines by a
prior internal deadline. It employed more than 76,000 workers.
Novant Health has fired more than 175 employees who were not compliant with its
COVID-19 vaccination requirement. The system said Sept. 21 that it had initially suspended about 375 of its more than 35,000
total employees due to vaccination noncompliance. Nearly 200 of those
employees became compliant during the five-day suspension period and avoided
termination.
NYU Langone has reportedly terminated 75 employees out of its 40,000-person
staff.
Olean General Hospital said it had seen 11 resignations ahead of New York’s Sept. 27
deadline for a first dose. As of Sept. 14, more than 250 of its 840
employees had not been vaccinated.
Richmond University Medical Center had a dozen resignations but did not disclose other terminations. It
employs about 2,000 people.
RWJBarnabas Health announced back in July that it had fired six employees at the
supervisor level who had not complied with a requirement for upper staff to
be vaccinated by June 30. The remaining 2,979 supervisors were vaccinated or
received exemptions.
Samaritan Medical Center in New York said it terminated 28 employees who did not comply with
the state's vaccine requirements after a two-week suspension. It employs
over 2,000 people.
St. Claire Regional Medical Center said it had fired 23 staff who had refused vaccination. A
spokesperson reportedly said these employees were a combination of
full-time, part-time and pro re nata employees and represented “less than
1%" of its total workforce.
St. Joseph's Health in Syracuse fired 78 of its 3,810 employees who did not meet
New York's statewide vaccination deadline. They were among 122 who were
suspended and given until Oct. 8 to receive a vaccine or be fired.
St. Luke's University Health Network said that 68 full-time employees and 87 part-time or per diem
employees had decided against vaccination and resigned as of its Sept. 25
deadline. Additionally, 668 had received a medical exemption, religious
exemption or a temporary deferral and will undergo weekly testing. St.
Luke's employs about 17,000 people.
St. Peter's Health Partners has suspended 322 unvaccinated employees out of its 11,000-plus
workforce, as of Sept. 28. Those employees have until Oct. 8 to become
compliant.
Tidelands Health had just a single employee out of 2,010 who did not comply with its
mandate and chose to resign.
Truman Medical Centers/University Health saw 39 resignations among its workforce of roughly 5,000 due to a
COVID-19 vaccination mandate.
UCHealth said that 119 out of its 26,500-person work did not
receive COVID-19 vaccine or an exemption by the Colorado system's Oct.
1 deadline. A spokesperson said that those employees are welcome to reapply
for their positions should they later receive the vaccine.
UNC Health has already seen 70 of its roughly 30,000 workers resign over a
COVID-19 vaccination mandate originally scheduled for Sept. 21 but now
delayed to Nov. 2. About 900 were still unvaccinated as of late
September.
University of Vermont Health Network reported Sept. 28 that it had 30 mandate-related departures
across three of its facilities—16 resignations at Alice Hyde Medical Center,
12 terminations at Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital and two resignations
at Elizabethtown Community Hospital. These losses have compounded with a
rash of non-vaccine-related resignations and hour reductions have led some
of the system's hospitals to recruit travel nurses and postpone inpatient
surgical procedures for at least one week.
Upstate University Hospital suspended or terminated 113 employees who did not meet New York's
statewide deadline, as of a Sept. 30 report. Some of those workers will be
able to return to their jobs if they receive a vaccine. The Syracuse
provider employs more than 6,600 people.
Valley Health has terminated 72 workers who were unvaccinated by its Sept. 21 final
deadline. It employs 6,300 staff.
0 comments:
Post a Comment