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Montana health care providers say they'll comply with CMS mandate, require staff to get COVID-19 vaccine

The country has also been slow in its rollout of the vaccine — less than 4% of the population has been fully vaccinated.
A rule issued earlier this month by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services says hospitals and clinics that receive Medicare or Medicaid funding must require staff to get vaccinated.

A group of Montana health care providers says it plans to require staff to get vaccinated against COVID-19, even as state law bans such mandates and federal vaccine mandates are being challenged in court.

St. Vincent Healthcare, RiverStone Health and Billings Clinicsaid in a statement on Tuesday that “Bottom line, to ensure that we can continue caring for tens of thousands of patients covered by Medicare/Medicaid, we are requiring our healthcare workers to become vaccinated against COVID-19 as outlined by the final interim rule.”

A rule issued earlier this month by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services says hospitals and clinics that receive Medicare or Medicaid funding must require staff to get vaccinated. It’s separate from the Occupational Health and Safety Administration’s vaccine mandate, which has been temporarily blocked in federal court.

St. Vincent, RiverStone and Billings Clinic say health care staff need to start getting vaccinated in the next three weeks before the first compliance deadline, with some exemptions.

“Each of our organizations are in the process of planning for the collection and evaluation of those requests,” the trio says in the statement.

As it’s written, the CMS interim rule supersedes local and state laws, including Montana’s ban on vaccine mandates.

Montana is one of several states suing the Biden administration over its vaccine mandates. Attorney General Austin Knudsen says the CMS rule “threatens to further burden the health care sector and patient well-being in Montana,” where many facilities are experiencing worker shortages.

Nadya joined Yellowstone Public Radio as news director in October 2021. Before coming to YPR, she spent six years as digital news editor/reporter for the NPR affiliate in Wichita, Kansas, where her work earned several Kansas Association of Broadcasters awards and a regional Edward R. Murrow award for Excellence in Social Media. Originally from Texas, Nadya has lived and worked in Colorado, Illinois, Washington, D.C.; and North Dakota. She lives in Billings with her cat, Dragon, and dog, Trooper, and enjoys hiking, crocheting, and traveling as often as possible.