Vaccination, testing and prevention: 3 keys to returning employees to the workplace

Vaccination efforts and the availability of new at-home COVID-19 tests pave the way for returning employees to the workplace.

With masks and distancing and handwashing, we’ve decreased influenza this season by 99% — so it’s possible that some of these public health measures will serve us well post-pandemic, too. (Photo: Shutterstock)

When I go out on a cold day, I take a layered approach to staying warm. Sometimes the sun will come out, and I can take off a layer. Sometimes the wind will make me grateful that I have one more layer. Employers should take a similar approach to protecting employees, customers and the community from COVID-19. As many employers contemplate returning remote workers to the workplace, employers need multiple different but complementary approaches to keep them safe.

Basic public health measures

Employers should continue to emphasize basic public health measures to prevent the spread of respiratory disease until the pandemic is over. This means:

With masks and distancing and handwashing, we’ve decreased influenza this season by 99% – so it’s possible that some of these public health measures will serve us well post-pandemic, too.

Vaccinations

Employers also need to promote the vaccination of their employees. We now know that vaccination is highly effective at preventing both symptomatic COVID-19 and asymptomatic COVID-19. That’s especially helpful, since spread from employees who themselves don’t realize they are ill has been responsible for many workplace outbreaks.

Employers can improve vaccination at their worksites through effective communication, reassuring employees they will not face unexpected bills, time-off policies and flexibility to allow for vaccination, including pay for hourly workers who miss work to get vaccinated. Here’s a link to an article we wrote in Harvard Business Review about using behavioral economics to help promote vaccine confidence.

Few employers are offering cash incentives for vaccination at this point, and fewer still are mandating vaccination. This could change in coming months, as vaccinations become available to all employees and there are more months of demonstrated safety and effectiveness. Employees in high risk occupations (hospitals, nursing homes, some food processing plants) are most likely to face mandates, and some states might require vaccination for other types of workers. Vaccination requirements for travel or attendance at high-capacity events could make it easier for employers to mandate COVID-19 vaccination.

Testing

As we move toward vaccinating all willing adults, employers should focus on testing to diminish the risk of workplace spread. Up until now, testing has been implemented by a minority of employers, largely because tests have been expensive, and many tests have required up to three days of processing, making them far less useful in preventing workplace spread.

The good news is that this is changing.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced emergency use authorization this week for two at-home COVID-19 antigen tests that will be sold directly to consumers without the need for a physician prescription. Both tests are approved for surveillance, as opposed to previous tests, which were restricted to those who displayed COVID-19 symptoms. These tests, Abbott’s Binax Now and Quidel’s Quickvue, are likely to be widely available and priced far lower than the $100 that most polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests still cost. Prices are also expected to drop as manufacturers scale up production.

The FDA also announced authorization to use BD’s Veritor antigen test in schools and physician offices for surveillance testing; in the past, this was authorized only for those with symptoms, although it was likely used for screening as well.

Here is why this matters: Most areas of the country continue to have high rates of community transmission, making it necessary to severely limit how many employees can return to the workplace. Tests could help reduce risk even as more employees return to the workplace.

The antigen tests detect at least 90% of cases and are exceptionally good at finding the most infectious cases of COVID-19. An employer implementing a program of twice-a-week home testing could substantially decrease the risk of a workplace exposure. The new batch of tests could turbocharge employer efforts to diminish risk at the workplace because:

Returning employees to the workplace is neither simple nor easy, but a measured, multi-layered approach makes it possible to keep them safe.

Jeff Levin-Scherz, MD, is population health leader at Willis Towers Watson.


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