New York

NY to Require Booster Shots for Health Care Workers; No Test-Out Option

NBC Universal, Inc.

New York state reported 130 new COVID fatalities on Thursday, the highest single-day toll since the mass vaccination rollout, and more than 11,000 hospital admissions, the highest total since the peak of the crisis in the spring of 2020. NBC New York’s Checkey Beckford reports.

New York is joining a handful of states in requiring health care workers to get a COVID-19 booster shot.

Gov. Kathy Hochul said Friday that she was expanding on a vaccine mandate she instituted last fall requiring health care workers to get vaccinated because too many breakthrough infections were being reported among health care workers.

“Staff is getting sick. They’re leaving. We need them to get well,” Hochul said at a news conference. “We need them to have the best fortification they possibly can and that means getting a booster shot as well.”

The Democrat said under the new order, health care workers will be required to get their shots within two weeks of becoming eligible for a booster. That’s as soon as two months for people who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and five months for people who received the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky says she doesn't believe the U.S. has reached the peak of the omicron coronavirus wave impacting the country.

Health care workers will only be exempt from the booster mandate if they have a medical reason for not being eligible to receive the shot.

The new mandate means New York will join other states, such as California and New Mexico, in requiring boosters for health care workers.

Copyright The Associated Press
Exit mobile version