Home Research Research Library Mandating Clinician COVID-19 Vaccination May Hinder Population-Level Uptake Mandating Clinician COVID-19 Vaccination May Hinder Population-Level Uptake 2021 Author(s) Eden, Aimee R, and Coutinho, Anastasia J Topic(s) Family Medicine Certification Keyword(s) Population Health, and Professionalism Volume Family Medicine Source Family Medicine Health care worker vaccine hesitancy has great impact not only on a worker’s individual health, but on the health of their patients, patient families, and on a population level. Because voluntary uptake of many vaccines, including the novel SARS coronavirus 2 (COVID-19) mRNA vaccine, has not been sufficient, vaccine mandates for health care workers have been suggested as one mechanism to ensure patient and health worker safety.1,2 In the current pandemic climate, the question arises: should clinicians, especially those who provide direct patient care, be mandated to get the COVID-19 vaccine? We argue that despite legal precedent for requiring vaccines, setting mandates for COVID-19 vaccines for health care professionals would be detrimental to population-level uptake, a high level of which is necessary to curb the pandemic. ABFM Research Read all 2023 From Resident to Diplomate: The Purpose and Process of Becoming Board Certified Go to From Resident to Diplomate: The Purpose and Process of Becoming Board Certified 2015 Family physicians’ scope of practice and American Board of Family Medicine recertification examination performance Go to Family physicians’ scope of practice and American Board of Family Medicine recertification examination performance 2019 Utilizing PHATE: A Population Health–Mapping Tool to Identify Areas of Food Insecurity Go to Utilizing PHATE: A Population Health–Mapping Tool to Identify Areas of Food Insecurity 2025 Impact of Training Length on Scope of Practice Among Residency Graduates: A Report From the Length of Training Pilot Study in Family Medicine Go to Impact of Training Length on Scope of Practice Among Residency Graduates: A Report From the Length of Training Pilot Study in Family Medicine
Author(s) Eden, Aimee R, and Coutinho, Anastasia J Topic(s) Family Medicine Certification Keyword(s) Population Health, and Professionalism Volume Family Medicine Source Family Medicine
ABFM Research Read all 2023 From Resident to Diplomate: The Purpose and Process of Becoming Board Certified Go to From Resident to Diplomate: The Purpose and Process of Becoming Board Certified 2015 Family physicians’ scope of practice and American Board of Family Medicine recertification examination performance Go to Family physicians’ scope of practice and American Board of Family Medicine recertification examination performance 2019 Utilizing PHATE: A Population Health–Mapping Tool to Identify Areas of Food Insecurity Go to Utilizing PHATE: A Population Health–Mapping Tool to Identify Areas of Food Insecurity 2025 Impact of Training Length on Scope of Practice Among Residency Graduates: A Report From the Length of Training Pilot Study in Family Medicine Go to Impact of Training Length on Scope of Practice Among Residency Graduates: A Report From the Length of Training Pilot Study in Family Medicine
2023 From Resident to Diplomate: The Purpose and Process of Becoming Board Certified Go to From Resident to Diplomate: The Purpose and Process of Becoming Board Certified
2015 Family physicians’ scope of practice and American Board of Family Medicine recertification examination performance Go to Family physicians’ scope of practice and American Board of Family Medicine recertification examination performance
2019 Utilizing PHATE: A Population Health–Mapping Tool to Identify Areas of Food Insecurity Go to Utilizing PHATE: A Population Health–Mapping Tool to Identify Areas of Food Insecurity
2025 Impact of Training Length on Scope of Practice Among Residency Graduates: A Report From the Length of Training Pilot Study in Family Medicine Go to Impact of Training Length on Scope of Practice Among Residency Graduates: A Report From the Length of Training Pilot Study in Family Medicine