NEWS Wednesday, september 29, 2021 HermIstOnHeraLd.COm • A9 Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald, File Tracy Wart, an infection prevention nurse at St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton, draws up a dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine during the hospital’s first round of staff vaccinations on Dec. 28, 2020. Crisis in the making? By BRYCE DOLE eO media Eastern Oregon’s health care system could see a mass exodus of workers come Oct. 18, the deadline for Gov. Kate Brown’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate. More than a quarter of all health care workers in Uma- tilla, Union and Morrow coun- ties remain unvaccinated, according to the Oregon Health Authority. All would be fired or forced to resign under the mandate. “It’s like a big game of chicken,” said Dr. Jon Hitz- man, Umatilla County’s public health officer. “Who’s going to relent first?” Hospitals across the three counties say they are working to comply with the mandate, but none would disclose any specific plans for how they would adjust or alter oper- ations if there is a shortage of workers. “We understand this new requirement has been wel- comed by some and has caused great concern for oth- ers,” said Mardi Ford, spokes- person for Grande Ronde Hos- pital in La Grande. “While we value every one of our employ- ees and support their right to make that choice; as a private, not-for-profit Critical Access Hospital, we must follow this government directive to con- tinue caring for our commu- nity. We do not want to lose a single member of our team.” Regional hospital offi- cials in recent months have said they already were strug- gling with a shortage of work- ers. Staff have said they are exhausted after the delta vari- ant ripped through the region, hospitalizing large swaths of unvaccinated people. In Uma- tilla County, the unvaccinated have accounted for about 49 out of every 50 hospitaliza- tions this year, according to county data. Hitzman said he’s con- cerned a mass layoff would only exacerbate the prob- lems the health care system is facing during the latest pandemic surge. “It’s going to have a mas- sive impact on the system,” said Hitzman, a vocal vaccine proponent who is opposed to the mandate. “We’re already all stretched thin. If you hap- pen to get into an automobile accident, you have to hope that they have a bed for you in the hospital. If I have a heart attack, are they going to have a bed for me in the hospital? Are they going to have a nurs- ing staff to care for me?” Hospitals mum on contingency plans CHI St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton reported 30% of its health care workers remain unvaccinated. Harold Geller, the president of CHI St. Anthony, said the hospital is working on contingency plans for the mid-October deadline. “As is true for most hospi- tals, we are concerned about the number of staff electing not to become vaccinated,” Geller said. “Our entire staff is committed to providing high quality care as safely as pos- sible. They’ve done a terrific job throughout the past year and a half. Each staff member is putting serious thought into this matter and it is our hope that we retain all staff. Caitlin Cozad, a spokesper- son for Good Shepherd Med- ical Center in Hermiston, said the hospital has “contingency plans in place to remain fully operational” and is “ensuring we have adequate staffing to meet the needs of our commu- nity.” She added the hospital is “on track to be fully com- pliant with the state mandate.” Neither Ford nor Cozad would disclose how many of their health care workers are vaccinated. But state data shows in Umatilla County, 36% of health care workers remain unvaccinated. In Union County, that number is 26%. In Morrow County, it’s 28%. Kevin Mealy, a spokes- person for the Oregon Nurses Association, said in a written statement the union is calling upon “all nurses and health care workers to get vacci- nated before the Oct. 18 deadline or to fill out the nec- essary paperwork for a med- ical or deeply held religious belief exception.” If they don’t, they could be fired. “Losing even one nurse from a patient’s bedside will deepen Oregon’s nurse staff- ing crisis and endanger com- munity health,” Mealy said. “ONA expects hospital and health care system CEOs to follow federal labor law and sit down with nurses to bar- gain the impact of workplace vaccination policies and find ways at-risk health care work- ers can continue contributing during the surge.” Come Visit Us At Our New Location! 630 S. Hwy 395 next to Obie’s Express and across from Tom Denchel’s Ford dealership Cases increase among hospital staff Good Shepherd from July 21 to Sept. 15 reported 54 COVID-19 cases among staff, according to state data. Grande Ronde’s staff from July 15 to Sept. 1 had 35 cases. And staff at CHI St. Anthony from Aug. 19 and Sept. 3 had 10 cases. Several hospitals say they have seen an increase in vac- cinations among health care workers since the mandate was announced. The vaccine mandate came in response to the rapidly ris- ing number of COVID-19 cases statewide as the delta variant surge filled Oregon’s hospitals almost entirely with unvaccinated people. To curb the spread, Brown announced the mandate for health care workers and teachers in August, when infection was at its peak. But Hitzman said he believes the state is push- ing the region’s health care system into a lose-lose sit- uation. He said health care workers should get vaccinated because they work around sick patients, but added those who have built their careers in the field may have little to fall back on. “What are they going to do, just change professions?” he said, adding, “For most of us, we’ve been deeply ingrained in our professions. It’s not like we can just go do something else … It’s going to create financial hardship for those individuals.” In addition, he said the deadline falls at an espe- cially critical time for Uma- tilla County. Two weeks ago, tens of thousands of people flooded into the county for the Pendleton Round-Up, an event where most people were maskless and there was no proof of vaccination or neg- ative COVID-19 test required. Health care workers for months have voiced con- cerns about the potential for infection to increase after this event. Hitzman noted if a surge were to occur, it would be within two to three weeks of the event — right around when the mid-October vac- cine deadline occurs. “We’ll see what the num- bers are over the next two to three weeks,” Hitzman said. “But if we see a major spike, I’m not going to be surprised. I’m going to breathe a sigh of relief if we don’t.” KEEP IT LOCAL