Yes.. if they want a job then get the jab. If you are actually currently pregnant then you are allowed to get a medical waiver under the current rules.
Bookmarked for future reference when we actually have a useful amount of data and the passage of time to review.
that's fine. then short staffed hospitals will be even more shorter staffed. And qualified healthcare workers will land on their feet because someone will want them. It'll work itself out, as it always does.
For new hires in the medical field in nearly every facility... the first question they ask now is "are you vaccinated". If you are not they will move onto the next candidate. Perhaps they can find some anti-vax doctor who will hiring them for their small practice.
how would you know that? you talk to every hospital... I understand there is a nurse shortage and 50 percent of nurses were not vaccinated as of a June 28th article. https://www.forbes.com/sites/judyst...-workershow-can-we-do-better/?sh=17676ab6589e I know from talking to some them that the ones that are thinking about having a family are waiting for more data... despite the fact that there is a lot of pressure put on them.
"Nearly every facility". "Nearly every state" "Nearly every governor" "Nearly every company" This is how we know you're making shit up. You used to omit "nearly" until we started asking you for proof or showing where it wasn't as you said, so you amended it to "nearly every". Still same brand of horseshit, and none of us believe you.
Let them go try to get a new job in the medical field and they will find out. By ignoring the science and rejecting vaccination -- which impacts all of their colleagues as well as the patients -- they have demonstrated they are too stupid to work in the medical field.
Why don't we ask the families of the many pregnant women who died of COVID what their families think about their decision to not get vaccinated. South Carolina TV meteorologist’s sister-in-law dies of COVID after emergency C-section https://www.newsobserver.com/news/state/south-carolina/article253221153.html? A TV meteorologist in Upstate South Carolina says his family is seeing the worst of the ongoing pandemic, after his sister-in-law died of COVID symptoms days after giving birth in an emergency C-section. Chris Justus, chief meteorologist for WYFF in Greenville, reported the development in a Facebook post. Justus says his sister-in-law, Brianna Justus, came down with COVID symptoms in the past two weeks and died Monday in a hospital. The family is well known in the region as owners of the century-old Justus Orchard, an apple operation in Hendersonville, North Carolina. “Last week Brianna was hit hard with COVID at 30 weeks pregnant. A few days after a positive test she couldn’t breathe and went into ICU. A few days later she underwent an emergency C-section and immediately went on a ventilator,” Justus wrote. “For the past week Brianna fought hard, so hard. Today, at 31 years old her heart gave out. Her sweet baby girl made it and is in the NICU.” Brianna Justus was married to his brother, Cory Justus, and the couple also have two sons, he said. Cory and Chris Justus are known in the Carolinas for their ties to Justus Orchard, about 20 miles south of Asheville. It is currently operated by their parents, Don and Margo Justus,according to the orchard’s website. “Chris and Cory are the fifth generation to work this land between their full-time jobs,” according to the operations website. “Chris is your local TV meteorologist and Cory is a Henderson County Sheriff Deputy. They and their wives Lauren and Brianna all ensure this family farm keeps going.” Chris Justus, a UNC Charlotte graduate, concluded his Facebook post by saying visitors to the orchard this fall will find “a new little Justus saying hello and one special angel watching over the farm from heaven.” South Carolina has recorded nearly 10,000 deaths and 626,038 cases of COVID since the pandemic began, the state reports. In North Carolina, one million COVID cases have been reported and nearly 14,000 have died, the state says.
do you have data on the risks of covid to pregnant women... that would be useful for comparison for when we see enough data to see if there are risk from the vaccine to women of child bearing age, pregnant women and their children.
Some women are making the wise decision... 'The vaccine was the safest thing': High Point woman encourages COVID-19 vaccine after recent pregnancy https://www.wxii12.com/article/the-...courages-covid-19-vaccine-pregnancy/37220236# A High Point woman is sharing her experience with the COVID-19 vaccination after delivering her third child during the COVID-19 pandemic. Carly White, 34, of High Point, received the first dose of her COVID-19 vaccine on March 2 when she was 26 weeks pregnant with her third child. She received her second dose on March 31 while 30 weeks pregnant. Her daughter, Raleigh, was born on June 3 at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. Last week, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine issued recommendations that anyone who is pregnant should be vaccinated against COVID-19, according to Wake Forest Baptist Health. Officials at WFBH said according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), expectant mothers are more likely to get severely ill with COVID-19 compared to non-pregnant people. The CDC also reports that only approximately 22% of all pregnant moms have received one or more doses of the COVID-19 vaccine. “The risks for me, being pregnant, were a lot higher without the vaccine,” White said. “After speaking with my physician, and hearing about the unvaccinated pregnant women she had seen contracting COVID-19 and being hospitalized, I knew the vaccine was the safest thing for me and my daughter. It’s the most selfless thing you can do as a mother, to give you and your baby the best opportunity to be healthy.” A press release from WFBH says the CDC noted that pregnant females with COVID-19 also are at an increased risk of preterm birth, which can affect a baby’s long-term health, and might be at an increased risk of other adverse pregnancy outcomes compared with pregnant women without COVID-19. “I strongly encourage any woman who is pregnant to receive a COVID-19 vaccination,” said Andrea Fernandez, MD, associate chief medical officer and regional director of women's health services at Wake Forest Baptist Health and White’s obstetrician. “This vaccination is safe for you and your baby and is the best defense at protecting you both from this virus.”