Emergency Physicians Increase their
Calls for Concerns around COVID-19 Delta Variant and Support Mandate
to Vaccinate Healthcare Workers
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[July 29, 2021]
Facing a worrisome climb in COVID-19 cases
across the country, the nation’s emergency physicians are increasing
their calls for everyone eligible to get vaccinated and to practice
safety measures to lessen the transmission of the virus.
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The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP)
has been closely monitoring the ever-changing dynamics at a national
and regional level and given the growing threat of the Delta variant
the organization has signed onto a joint statement among medical
organizations that calls on all workers in health and long-term care
to get vaccinated against the virus.
“ACEP has consistently encouraged vaccination for everyone who is
eligible but given the new evidence around the dangers and trends of
the Delta variant, we are joining those in the medical community to
say all healthcare workers and those in long-term care facilities
need to be vaccinated in order to protect those in our communities,”
said Mark Rosenberg, DO, MBA, FACEP, president of ACEP. “While one
statement alone may not shift the needle, we need to come together
and focus on system-wide solutions if we’re to beat this pandemic.”
ACEP also supports the updated guidance which the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released yesterday that
recommends that vaccinated individuals in areas with high rates of
the variant and those that are in close contact with people who are
immunocompromised or unvaccinated—including children under the age
of 12—wear masks while indoors in public. The guidance for people
who are unvaccinated remains the same: continue wear a mask until
you are fully vaccinated.
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These heightened efforts come after recent scientific
evidence shows that the Delta variant behaves differently from other
strains of the virus. And our emergency departments are seeing the
devastating impacts of unvaccinated individuals who contract
COVID-19. Data shows that getting vaccinated reduces the risk of
symptomatic infection seven-fold and reduces the risk of
hospitalization 20-fold.
Added Dr. Rosenberg, “We are incredibly concerned for our patients
and our colleagues. Emergency departments around the country are
once again seeing a surge in severely ill patients, many of them
young or unvaccinated. I don’t want to have to lose another patient
to this terrible disease—especially when it could have been
prevented.”
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The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) is the national
medical society representing emergency medicine. Through continuing
education, research, public education and advocacy, ACEP advances
emergency care on behalf of its 40,000 emergency physician members,
and the more than 150 million Americans they treat on an annual
basis. For more information, visit
www.acep.org and
www.emergencyphysicians.org.
[Steve Arnoff] |