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That does seem to be the case based on Bassett's comment at the end. I've said in other threads that we're at the point where COVID exhaustion has reached the point where it will start impacting policy.Why? I guess they care about the amount of staffing now. So when it suits those in charge, the mandate can be forgotten?
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York will not enforce its mandate requiring health care workers to get COVID-19 boosters in light of concerns about staffing shortages, state health officials said Friday.
Still, several dozen nursing homes reported as few as 0% of workers with booster shots, with rates lowest in Brooklyn as well as upstate counties in the Finger Lakes, central and northern New York.
Meanwhile, 54% of 514,000 hospital staff have booster shots, according to state data. Fewer than one-third of workers reportedly had booster shots at two dozen hospitals from the Bronx, to Rockland County, to Utica, to Erie County.
State health officials are pointing to a rosier figure: the number of staffers who have a booster shot or say they’re willing.
“While we are making progress with 75% of staff received or are willing to receive their booster, the reality is that not enough healthcare workers will be boosted by next week’s requirement in order to avoid substantial staffing issues in our already overstressed healthcare system,” Bassett said in a statement.
Why? I guess they care about the amount of staffing now. So when it suits those in charge, the mandate can be forgotten?
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York will not enforce its mandate requiring health care workers to get COVID-19 boosters in light of concerns about staffing shortages, state health officials said Friday.
Still, several dozen nursing homes reported as few as 0% of workers with booster shots, with rates lowest in Brooklyn as well as upstate counties in the Finger Lakes, central and northern New York.
Meanwhile, 54% of 514,000 hospital staff have booster shots, according to state data. Fewer than one-third of workers reportedly had booster shots at two dozen hospitals from the Bronx, to Rockland County, to Utica, to Erie County.
State health officials are pointing to a rosier figure: the number of staffers who have a booster shot or say they’re willing.
“While we are making progress with 75% of staff received or are willing to receive their booster, the reality is that not enough healthcare workers will be boosted by next week’s requirement in order to avoid substantial staffing issues in our already overstressed healthcare system,” Bassett said in a statement.
This strikes me as more of a reflection of the dire circumstances that the health industry faces than a condemnation of those in charge. This is hardly a decision of convenience.Why? I guess they care about the amount of staffing now. So when it suits those in charge, the mandate can be forgotten?
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York will not enforce its mandate requiring health care workers to get COVID-19 boosters in light of concerns about staffing shortages, state health officials said Friday.
Still, several dozen nursing homes reported as few as 0% of workers with booster shots, with rates lowest in Brooklyn as well as upstate counties in the Finger Lakes, central and northern New York.
Meanwhile, 54% of 514,000 hospital staff have booster shots, according to state data. Fewer than one-third of workers reportedly had booster shots at two dozen hospitals from the Bronx, to Rockland County, to Utica, to Erie County.
State health officials are pointing to a rosier figure: the number of staffers who have a booster shot or say they’re willing.
“While we are making progress with 75% of staff received or are willing to receive their booster, the reality is that not enough healthcare workers will be boosted by next week’s requirement in order to avoid substantial staffing issues in our already overstressed healthcare system,” Bassett said in a statement.
This strikes me as more of a reflection of the dire circumstances that the health industry faces than a condemnation of those in charge. This is hardly a decision of convenience.
Yep. The industry has seen loses in personnel throughout the pandemic due to burn out and a variety of other reasons.This strikes me as more of a reflection of the dire circumstances that the health industry faces than a condemnation of those in charge. This is hardly a decision of convenience.
Where are they going to in order to fill the shortages?That (bolded above) is exactly what it was. Had the ‘booster’ mandate not been rescinded, it would have resulted in a government mandated healthcare worker shortage. Surely, you are not going to argue that “the science” had changed.
Where are they going to in order to fill the shortages?
JFC. Health care facilities.Who are “they”?
Um….duh? You’re making this out to be an abandonment of principle and science due to hypocrisy or something, rather than a reflection of the dire circumstances that brought them to this place.This reversal of position (aka flip-flop) was done to prevent creating more shortages.
But it does feel that way. Nothing has changed regarding the care that's given to people in the hospital and nursing homes. Why would they relax the standards for the most vulnerable?JFC. Health care facilities.
Um….duh? You’re making this out to be an abandonment of principle and science due to hypocrisy or something, rather than a reflection of the dire circumstances that brought them to this place.
“New York will not enforce its mandate requiring health care workers to get COVID-19 boosters in light of concerns about staffing shortages, state health officials said Friday.”But it does feel that way. Nothing has changed regarding the care that's given to people in the hospital and nursing homes. Why would they relax the standards for the most vulnerable?
Why can't they just be honest and outright say they don't care if the workers get the booster, we need to keep the staff for the good of the patients. I'd respect and get behind that better.
You're right, and I'm doing a poor job putting into words what I meant. I guess I want to know the 'why' they are no longer behind the 'booster' mandate. Why are the patients no longer a priority in regards to how protected they are from getting covid from a health care worker.“New York will not enforce its mandate requiring health care workers to get COVID-19 boosters in light of concerns about staffing shortages, state health officials said Friday.”
It’s…the first sentence.
Because of staffing shortages.You're right, and I'm doing a poor job putting into words what I meant. I guess I want to know the 'why' they are no longer behind the 'booster' mandate. Why are the patients no longer a priority in regards to how protected they are from getting covid from a health care worker.
Okay, let me put this another way:You're right, and I'm doing a poor job putting into words what I meant. I guess I want to know the 'why' they are no longer behind the 'booster' mandate. Why are the patients no longer a priority in regards to how protected they are from getting covid from a health care worker.
Strange, but that actually makes sense to me.Okay, let me put this another way:
You hate potatoes. Potatoes make you gag. But due to Bad Circumstances there's a massive food shortage and you're starving, and potatoes are available so you eat them to stay alive.
So what's the bigger story here?
1) Bad Circumstances leading to food shortages and starvation, or
2) You abandoning your preferred foods and choosing to eat potatoes.
Making it up as they go, without rhyme or reason.Why? I guess they care about the amount of staffing now. So when it suits those in charge, the mandate can be forgotten?
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York will not enforce its mandate requiring health care workers to get COVID-19 boosters in light of concerns about staffing shortages, state health officials said Friday.
Still, several dozen nursing homes reported as few as 0% of workers with booster shots, with rates lowest in Brooklyn as well as upstate counties in the Finger Lakes, central and northern New York.
Meanwhile, 54% of 514,000 hospital staff have booster shots, according to state data. Fewer than one-third of workers reportedly had booster shots at two dozen hospitals from the Bronx, to Rockland County, to Utica, to Erie County.
State health officials are pointing to a rosier figure: the number of staffers who have a booster shot or say they’re willing.
“While we are making progress with 75% of staff received or are willing to receive their booster, the reality is that not enough healthcare workers will be boosted by next week’s requirement in order to avoid substantial staffing issues in our already overstressed healthcare system,” Bassett said in a statement.
I'm trying to wrap my mind around the concept of being a health care worker....that causes greater levels of death.Eh…if they didn’t fire people for not getting the vaccine, the shortage wouldn’t be as bad as it is.
Self-inflicted wound.
Guess they really can’t afford to lose that next 25%
I’m trying to wrap my mind around why we fired people (and some cheered) that we called heroes when they faced the first wave without PPE.I'm trying to wrap my mind around the concept of being a health care worker....that causes greater levels of death.
Uh, they did have Personal Protection Equipment, and most if not all used every bit of it....but then some fringy elements dismissed the most effective PPE, vax.I’m trying to wrap my mind around why we fired people (and some cheered) that we called heroes when they faced the first wave without PPE.
There was a PPE shortage at the beginning of Covid. They did not have sufficient PPE and often wore the same masks for shift and shift.Uh, they did have Personal Protection Equipment, and most if not all used every bit of it....but then some fringy elements dismissed the most effective PPE, vax.
So again, how in the hell does a health care worker get to the point of discarding the most effective form of covid mediation causing them to be a typhoid Mary for those they are supposed to care for??
Irrelevant, vax supplies is not an issue.There was a PPE shortage at the beginning of Covid.
They did not have sufficient PPE and often wore the same masks for shift and shift.
So again, how in the hell does a health care worker get to the point of discarding the most effective form of covid mediation causing them to be a typhoid Mary for those they are supposed to care for?? Are you seriously going to say that is caused by "burnout"? They can't get vaxed because they are "burned out"?And hey…I don’t work in healthcare soI’m not the one facing burnout because there aren’t enough healthcare workers. Self inflicted wound…so oh well. It is what it is.
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