Testifying today at an Occupational Safety and Health Administration hearing, AHA policy staff urged the agency not to finalize its emergency temporary standard for occupational exposure to COVID-19, which is unnecessary and would cause confusion. 

“Hospitals and their staff need clarity from the federal agencies in identifying what actions must be taken to protect against transmission of COVID-19,” said Nancy Foster, AHA’s vice president for quality and patient safety policy. “They also need rapid changes in those instructions as new science emerges. Having competing federal regulations diminishes that clarity, and the slow and deliberate speed at which regulations change makes it impossible to incorporate emerging scientific evidence. That’s why AHA strongly supports the continued reliance on CDC’s guidance as we continue to deal with the evolving pandemic.”

Between the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s evolving, science-based guidance and recommendations, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ vaccination requirement and existing OSHA general standards, AHA “strongly believes that an inconsistent OSHA COVID-19 health care standard is counterproductive,” Foster said. “It would cause confusion and will ultimately lower hospital employees’ morale and worsen unprecedented personnel shortages in hospitals.”

For more information, see AHA’s recent comment letter (https://www.aha.org/lettercomment/2022-04-22-aha-urges-osha-not-finalize-covid-19-emergency-temporary-standard) to the agency.
 

Headline
A lawsuit filed May 19 by 25 states and the District of Columbia against the Department of Education claims that the agency’s final rule establishing new…
Headline
The AHA and other national health care groups sent a letter to members of the House and Senate appropriations committees, urging them to provide $1.…
Headline
The Department of Education April 30 released a final rule that defines the terms “professional student” and “graduate student” to determine federal…
Headline
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and other federal agencies released a joint guide yesterday for organizations to apply zero…
Headline
In this conversation, University of Illinois Chicago’s Pauline Maki, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry, psychology, and obstetrics and gynecology, and Makeba…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Food and Drug Administration April 23 announced a new pathway to expedite access to certain FDA-…