"The Washington State Nurses Association (WSNA) is committed to advocating
for the health of nurses, patients and the communities they serve. Because of this
commitment, WSNA strongly recommends that all nurses and other health care providers
be vaccinated against all influenza viruses. WSNA strongly supports and urges voluntary
efforts that aim for 100% vaccination rates, including annual education and implementation
of comprehensive influenza vaccination programs for all health care providers.
WSNA supports enforcement of existing Federal and State regulations to ensure that
all employers meet the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Occupational Health
and Safety Administration (OSHA) requirements for influenza prevention.
WSNA believes a hospital-by-hospital approach to mandatory vaccinations is poor
public policy. It lacks consistency and adequate protection for patients and health
care workers. WSNA believes that any vaccination policy is only one component of
a comprehensive influenza prevention policy and should only be enacted as a result
of federal or public health regulation. WSNA believes that any such regulation must
include the following core components:
- Employers must ensure that appropriate protection and safety measures are in place
to provide a safe workplace environment for nurses and health care workers.
- Employers must ensure that influenza vaccines are available and offered to every
health care worker annually at convenient times and locations.
- The policy must cover all health care settings and health care workers. This includes
all settings such as hospitals, long-term care facilities, adult boarding homes,
outpatient clinics, etc. Health care workers must include those licensed and unlicensed
who work in close proximity to patients, (e.g. nurses, emergency responders, physicians,
housekeeping personnel, health care secretarial staff, etc).
- If a declination form is required for vaccination, the nurse must be able to sign
the form confidentially; that is, the nurse must not be required to divulge personal
health information or declare the reason(s) for refusal of a vaccine. The employer
must not discriminate against or discipline a nurse for opting out.
- The employer must not discriminate against or discipline nurses for the appropriate
use of sick time.
- The employer must comply with CDC and OSHA Guidelines must be used for prevention,
protection, and safety of nurses and patients."