With Omicron surging, Alberta Health Services offers COVID testing option to unvaccinated staff
CBC
As Alberta braces for the impact of an Omicron-driven wave of infections, the province is offering unvaccinated physicians and health staff frequent COVID-19 testing in a bid to get employees back to work.
The testing option, which was previously available to a small number of unimmunized Alberta Health Services workers at select locations, will now be available to any unvaccinated staff member who wants back on the job.
About 1,400 full and part-time staff are on unpaid leave because they are not fully vaccinated against COVID-19, breaching an AHS mandate.
"In light of the risk posed by the Omicron variant, we need to adjust the policy to maximize capacity and avoid losing any staff if we can while still keeping patients safe," Health Minister Jason Copping said in a news release Thursday.
The unvaccinated workers will have to pay for testing.
The policy will be reviewed at the end of March 2022, the province said.
In late-November, the provincial government directed AHS to allow the temporary rapid testing option due to concerns care could be impacted at sites where compliance is low. A total of 175 staff at health-care facilities were initially offered the rapid test option.
The mandatory vaccination policy went into effect on Dec 13 and applies to all AHS and Covenant Health staff as well as workers at AHS subsidiaries, including Carewest, Capital Care and Alberta Precision Laboratories.
According to the health authority's website, AHS and its subsidiaries have a combined workforce of 121,000 people.
More than 97 per cent of full-time and part-time staff have had at least two doses of COVID-19 vaccine, AHS said in the news release Thursday.
More than 99.8 per cent of physicians have had at least two doses while 99 per cent of ICU staff have submitted proof of being fully immunized.
According to AHS, more than 11,000 employees have requested exemptions to the mandatory immunization policy — with 251 of those being medical accommodations. However only 40 per cent of those have been granted.
Cases of Omicron have soared and Alberta is preparing hospitals for the pending impact.
As of Thursday, there were 318 people in hospital with COVID-19, including 64 in intensive care.