OSHA temporary enforcement effort targeting health care facilities with COVID-19 patients

Washington — OSHA recently announced the start of a three-month increase of inspections at hospitals and nursing care facilities that treat COVID-19 patients.

Running through June 9, the enforcement effort will focus on “targeted high-hazard” health care facilities. The inspections are intended to verify employers’ readiness to address current or future COVID-19 surges/variants. OSHA said it will conduct follow-up inspections at establishments that were previously issued citations and those at which the agency didn’t conduct in-person inspections after receiving complaints.

The initiative is intended to supplement OSHA’s revised COVID-19 National Emphasis Program, in effect since July 7. Together, they’re expected to make up 15% of the agency’s enforcement activity.

OSHA is working on a permanent standard on COVID-19 focused on health care workers after withdrawing on Dec. 27 the non-recordkeeping parts of an emergency temporary standard.

“We are using available tools while we finalize a health care standard,” OSHA administrator Doug Parker said in a press release. “We want to be ahead of any future events in health care.”

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Employers’ continued compliance with the ETS, the release adds, will satisfy their obligations under the General Duty Clause, as well as OSHA’s standards on personal protective equipment and respiratory protection.

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