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COVID-19 Risk assessment and vaccination control
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Hi all, I hope you can help… I'm getting pressure from my management team to include COVID vaccination status as a control measure in reducing the risk of transmitting the virus in our officers. I believe the existing control measures in place, reduce the risk to an acceptable level, Therefore cannot see how vaccination status will strengthen this assessment. my question is do any of you who work in an office environment use vaccination status as a control measure in your risk assessments. And if you do how do you monitor the effectiveness of this control?
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Rank: Super forum user
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What a set of morooons. The vaccines do not stop someone who has been vaccinated catching Covid The vaccines do not stop someone who has been vaccinated transmitting Covid At best they reduce the effect of the symptoms upon the individual who has had the vaccinations The mutations are becoming more transmissible So two futile and pointless exercises for the workplace, a location attended 40 out of 168 hours - vaccinations and vaccine status.
Probably why the devolved assemblies are not getting rid of care workers based on herd mentality "pseudo-science".
Now if the vaccinations stopped acquistion / transmission they may have a point - as it stands they do not.
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2 users thanked Roundtuit for this useful post.
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Rank: Super forum user
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What a set of morooons. The vaccines do not stop someone who has been vaccinated catching Covid The vaccines do not stop someone who has been vaccinated transmitting Covid At best they reduce the effect of the symptoms upon the individual who has had the vaccinations The mutations are becoming more transmissible So two futile and pointless exercises for the workplace, a location attended 40 out of 168 hours - vaccinations and vaccine status.
Probably why the devolved assemblies are not getting rid of care workers based on herd mentality "pseudo-science".
Now if the vaccinations stopped acquistion / transmission they may have a point - as it stands they do not.
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2 users thanked Roundtuit for this useful post.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Like most one colleague completed their vaccinations a couple of months ago They attended a group meeting in the office early last week and by Friday they were informing everyone they had received a positive PCR test during the week Still awaiting confirmation from all attendees as to their current individual "Covid" status
Best thing is we did not specifically meet with others permanently working from the office If the office safety had been based upon vaccine status...... Instead it is still temperature checking, social distancing, hygiene and face coverings
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Rank: Super forum user
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Like most one colleague completed their vaccinations a couple of months ago They attended a group meeting in the office early last week and by Friday they were informing everyone they had received a positive PCR test during the week Still awaiting confirmation from all attendees as to their current individual "Covid" status
Best thing is we did not specifically meet with others permanently working from the office If the office safety had been based upon vaccine status...... Instead it is still temperature checking, social distancing, hygiene and face coverings
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Rank: Super forum user
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A control measure is a measure you take to control risk. Vaccination status is not a control measure, simply because it is not within the organisation's control, but is an individual choice over which you have no control. If the vaccination status is such that it reduces the risk, it is the risk before controls that it reduces, not the residual risk after controls. So it is relevant to the risk in the same way that the prevalence of Covid in your area is relevant to the risk. It is no more a control measure than a low prevalence of Covid is. That's just the background of your risk assessment that feeds in to your evaluation of risk.
The exception to this would be if you took measures of some kind against unvaccinated people, for example sacking them. This would either be because it is a legal requirement for your organisation (for example, a care home), or because you are getting into something that has so many pitfalls that you are much better off not getting into it. On the other hand, if it makes people happy to record it as a control measure, why not make them happy?
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2 users thanked Kate for this useful post.
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Rank: New forum user
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This should be a part of legal compliance, as in many countries this is mandatory.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Originally Posted by: Waqas9994 This should be a part of legal compliance, as in many countries this is mandatory.
Quite a bold statement - do you have any examples?
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Rank: Super forum user
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Originally Posted by: Waqas9994 This should be a part of legal compliance, as in many countries this is mandatory.
Quite a bold statement - do you have any examples?
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Rank: Super forum user
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In many countries it is not mandatory, so how could it be part of legal compliance?
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Rank: Super forum user
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Originally Posted by: Roundtuit Originally Posted by: Waqas9994 This should be a part of legal compliance, as in many countries this is mandatory.
Quite a bold statement - do you have any examples?
We have offices where it is almost required to be vaccinated. For example, in Abu Dhabi there has been some quite strong 'guidance' to employers that they should require staff attending a place of work to be vaccinated, and it is (at least, has been, I'm not 100% certain it still applies today) a legal requirement that if you are not vacinated you need to have (and pay for) a PCR test weekly. The employer gets fined if the employees don't comply with the test requirements, leading employers to be quite keen on mandating vaccination.
Vaccinatiuon is mandatory in certain sectors in a number of countires, I believe (France has recently sacked some healthcare workers, for example - that was in the news).
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Rank: Super forum user
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I think you have to be very cafeul here...I can see a scenario where companies are held to account for not complying with control measures stated in thier risk assessments...rather than clear legal requirement from Gov.. In that context it would be legal compliance
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Rank: Super forum user
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Just because the control is mentioned in a risk assessment des not mean that it is a legal requirement. The owner of the “Spaced Out Coffee Shop and Bong Emporium” may write that all of his employees need to wear pointy hats covered in foil in his risk assessment to protect them from “Bad Vibes” .
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Rank: Forum user
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Originally Posted by: Waqas9994 This should be a part of legal compliance, as in many countries this is mandatory.
Lets hope not, I feel that would be a very dangerous path to take. How do you deal with those who dont want it? Camps, forced vaccinations ??
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Rank: Super forum user
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How do you deal with those who cannot (rather than choose not)?
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Rank: Super forum user
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How do you deal with those who cannot (rather than choose not)?
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Rank: Super forum user
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As Kate has said vaccination is not in H&S terms, a control because, this not a health and safety mater but rather a public health matter . The driver for vaccination is not protecting the individual (which is what Occupational H&S is about) but about protecting the wider community and the health system in particular. Vaccinations have never been mandated until now, when the new act comes into and that will only apply to health care settings. Even while working in higher containment level labs the jabs were only ever recommend, not mandated, as the HSE took the line that vaccination is the last line of defence and other measures should be used first. I have been told that in some places abroad, a heavy emphasis is placed on vaccinations rather than safe systems of work. Not the approach we have taken here in the UK. There are many issues with using vaccinations as a “control” which means that they can not be relied upon and what’s the point of control that cannot be relied upon.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Originally Posted by: A Kurdziel Vaccinations have never been mandated until now, when the new act comes into and that will only apply to health care settings.
Interstingly i was reading (and it was a union newsletter) that they may even be backing off the mandatory requirement in health care settings because the parent legislation wich allows for additional controls to be brought in specifically excludes vacination - hope that makes some sence - if i can find the details again i will post them.
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Rank: Super forum user
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https://www.rsmuk.com/ideas-and-insights/legal/coronavirus-compulsory-vaccination-the-employment-legal-issues
The new regulations requiring care home staff to be vaccinated has been challenged on grounds that it contravenes section 45E of the Public Health (Control of Disease Act) 1984. This Act says that whilst regulations can be made to stop the threat of infection or contamination, they may not include provision requiring a person to undergo medical treatment - including vaccination. This is an interesting development, and it is possible that formal judicial review proceedings challenging the new regulations will follow.
Sorry not union but a legal briefing
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4 users thanked HSSnail for this useful post.
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Rank: Super forum user
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I don’t think its that ambiguous -Section 45E says you can’ t force people to have vaccinations end of. Of course they could try to pass an Act of parliament but then I am not sure that they would get it to pass, with the Tory awkward squad flexing its muscles and it could be challenged under the Human Rights Act. I think Boris and co have talked themselves into a corner… again.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Originally Posted by: N Hancock
Lets hope not, I feel that would be a very dangerous path to take. How do you deal with those who dont want it? Camps, forced vaccinations ??
FWIW, in one of the legislative regimes where we operate, at some times recently if you get a positive result at a test centre they load you into a bus and take you to a camp well outside a centre of habitation for the duration of your isolation. We've had staff who went through that.
I also note that we've had internment in the UK within my lifetime.
During Covid the government created a load of law without even debate in parliament.
These things are not so incomprehensible as one might hope.
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Rank: Super forum user
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The last time we had interment in this country was in Northern Ireland but only under the local Special Powers Act 1922. In theory it could be introduced under the Civil Contingencies Act but that could be challenged on the grounds that the situation does not require that people be locked up especially if they are simply refusing to be vaccinated. As noted on another thread the Public Health (Control of Disease) Act 1984 allows the authorities do all sorts of things but specifically does not allow them to force people to undergo any specific medical treatment especially vaccination. It’s good job not we are not alpacas!
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