
VA says 245,000 more workers must get COVID vaccine to keep their jobs
CBSN
The Department of Veterans Affairs was the first federal agency to require health care employees to get vaccinated against COVID-19, and now it's expanding who will need to be vaccinated in order to keep their jobs. Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough announced on "CBS This Morning" Wednesday that the VA is extending that requirement to cover a wider range of workers and volunteers at VA health facilities.
"A couple of weeks ago, we mandated about 115,000 people toll get the vaccine. These are healthcare professionals who are most regularly in touch with veterans. That's what this is all about—keeping our veterans safe. What we have noticed is that there is an uptick, about a doubling of the rate of vaccinations among those 35,000 healthcare professionals of that first wave getting vaccinated, so that's progressing well. Based on that we decide that we'll start tomorrow, expanding the vaccination requirement to 245,000 additional employees, about 110,000 of them we believe still need the vaccination," McDonough told "CBS This Morning" co-host Tony Dokoupil. The employees mandated were Title 38 VA health care personnel including physicians, dentists, podiatrists, optometrists, registered nurses, and other health care workers who work in Veterans Health Administration facilities, visit VHA facilities, or provide direct care to those VA serves would need to be vaccinated. McDonough said adding more employees and volunteers will ensure all veterans who enter VA facilities remain safe.
In the past year, over 135 million passengers traveled to the U.S. from other countries. To infectious disease experts, that represents 135 million chances for an outbreak to begin. To identify and stop the next potential pandemic, government disease detectives have been discreetly searching for viral pathogens in wastewater from airplanes. Experts are worried that these efforts may not be enough.