Search Posts
Recent Posts
- Rhode Island Weather for November 24, 2024 – Jack Donnelly November 24, 2024
- Ask Chef Walter: Thanksgiving turkey common mistakes – Walter Potenza November 24, 2024
- RI Blood Center gives thanks while encouraging blood donations Thanksgiving week November 24, 2024
- A Waif – a short story by Michael Fine November 24, 2024
- Out and About in RI: It takes a village to assemble and distribute “Turkey Baskets” in Pawtucket November 24, 2024
Categories
Subscribe!
Thanks for subscribing! Please check your email for further instructions.
RI “Immunization, Testing, Health Screening for Health Care Workers” updated regs will include COVID boosters
An updated version of Rhode Island’s Immunization, Testing and Health Screening for Health Care Workers regulations was posted for public comment today. (access it here.) The RIDOH will be taking public comment on these regulations until March 25th. These would be standing changes to the healthcare worker vaccination regulations, to replace the emergency regulations that were first promulgated on August 17, 2021 and updated on February 10, 2022.
These proposed regulations align the definition of “up to date” for COVID-19 vaccination with CDC guidance. Whereas the emergency regulations focused on the completion of a primary series, the proposed permanent regulations would include booster doses. Another change is that healthcare workers who are not up to date with their COVID-19 vaccinations would be required to wear a medical grade N95 mask when transmission rates in Rhode Island are substantial (50 cases or more per 100K people per week).
As a result of the emergency regulations, roughly 94% of Rhode Island’s healthcare workforce is vaccinated. Our vaccination rate increased by more than 10% in September, after RIDOH promulgated the emergency regulation. This was incredibly important to patient and resident safety, given that months later we were seeing individual days with 5,000 and 6,000 new cases. However, we are at a different point in this pandemic, with cases, hospitalizations, and deaths all declining.
As Governor McKee and Dr. McDonald shared, serious illness from COVID-19 is now becoming a preventable, treatable disease. We have the systems and tools in place to manage COVID-19 like we do other endemic diseases. The proposed regulation would continue to mitigate risk for the healthcare worker and help keep patients and residents safe.
To submit your comments go to: https://rules.sos.ri.gov/Promulgations/Part/216-20-15-7
Submit by March 25th.