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http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002057338_danny08.html
The Seattle Times
October 8, 2004
Danny Westneat / Times staff columnist
Flu shot helps job security?
Last year, the flu shot didn't work so well. It's estimated that half the
adults who came down with flu had first gotten the shot. This year, some flu
vaccine is contaminated. When discovered in August, U.S. officials promised
it was no big deal. They were undercut this week by the British, who, citing
bacterial contamination, shut down a plant that makes half our vaccine
supply. Now imagine, amid this mess, that your employer comes to you and
says: "Get a flu shot or you're fired." That's the predicament faced by 5,000
workers at Seattle's Virginia Mason Medical Center. They have until Jan. 1 to
get the shot, or get canned.
It's believed to be the first hospital in the nation to require flu vaccines.
In doing so, it pits two ethical principles central to the practice of
medicine against each other. The Hippocratic Oath says "do no harm." The
hospital argues that vaccinating everyone reduces the chance a sick doctor or
nurse will give the flu to vulnerable patients.
That seems reasonable. But it's also up to patients whether to accept any
medical care, from surgery to drugs. Typically patients - in this case, the
staff - are free to assess the risks and benefits, and decide what is
injected into their bodies, without being threatened. The union
representing the hospital's 600 nurses filed suit last week against the
mandatory shots. Like most ethical conundrums, this one has no easy answer.
In this case, though, I side with the nurses.
The reason? Our nation's flu program is in shambles.
We're being treated to a press frenzy this week about how citizens allegedly
are panicking to get their flu shots before supplies run out. But I'd argue
the opposite: Unless you're in one of the high-risk groups, who would want
one? Consider the nation's medical professionals. They talk unceasingly about
how everyone should get shots. But they don't follow this advice themselves.
Only 36 percent of America's health-care workers get vaccinated - about the
same rate as the rest of us, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
In their court filing, the nurses go so far as to allege that requiring flu
shots violates the hospital's duty "to maintain a safe and healthy
workplace." They contend the shots pose risks, and that the hospital's backup
plan - antiviral medicine - is even worse because those medicines have
"significant side effects." Add to that the constant problems with the
vaccine supply and its spotty record at warding off flu. It hardly inspires
confidence, does it?
I'm not saying the flu shot is categorically bad. It's one of the safer
vaccines, and vulnerable people, such as the elderly, should consider getting
it. Even if Virginia Mason ends up backing away, its policy is part of a
movement toward "universal vaccination." The idea is that the only way to
beat the flu for anyone is to give shots to everyone. Until healthy,
intelligent doctors and nurses are willing to take the shot without being
forced, count me out.
Danny Westneat's column appears Wednesday and Friday. Reach him at
206-464-2086 or dwestneat@seattletimes.com.
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