On Dec. 27, 2021, the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) withdrew the vast majority of its Healthcare Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS), which was issued in June 2021. This ETS provided, among other things, stringent requirements for PPE and safety protocols to protect health care workers from COVID-19. It also required covered health care facilities to pay time off for employees missing work due to either a positive test result or experiencing Covid symptoms. Currently, all that remains of the Healthcare ETS are the recordkeeping requirements outlined below.
Why OSHA Withdrew the ETS. Under the OSH Act, an ETS is effective until superseded by a permanent standard – a process contemplated by the OSH Act to occur within six months of the ETS’s promulgation. Because OSHA did not think it could complete the final rule within the allotted timeframe, it withdrew the lion’s share of the Healthcare ETS and has stated, “it intends to continue to work expeditiously to issue a final standard that will protect healthcare workers from COVID-19 hazards, and will do so as it also considers its broader infectious disease rulemaking.”
What About Mandatory Vaccination and Testing? Withdrawal of the Healthcare ETS does not impact OSHA’s Vaccination and Testing ETS, which generally applies to all businesses with 100 or more employees. The Vaccination and Testing ETS remains in place until and unless the U.S. Supreme Court (or some other court) blocks enforcement of the standard. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear arguments on OSHA’s Vaccination and Testing ETS on January 7. The U.S. Supreme Court will also hear arguments on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Omnibus COVID-19 Health Care Staff Vaccination Interim Final Rule (CMS Vaccine Mandate) the same day. Enforcement of the CMS Vaccine Mandate has been blocked in some states, but not others, pending a ruling from the high court.
What Do Employers Still Need to Do? Because compliance obligations related to COVID-19 in the workplace are changing rapidly, businesses should routinely consult with their human resources and legal teams to assess what risks, if any, presently exist for their businesses. With that in mind, below are the remaining obligations for covered health care facilities under the Healthcare ETS.
The following are the OSHA Healthcare ETS recordkeeping requirements, which are still in place for businesses subject to the Healthcare ETS:
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