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Top Mississippi hospital tightens its COVID vaccine policy

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UMMC's Dr. Alan Jones speaks inside the field hospital set up on the campus to address patient overflow.
Kobee Vance, MPB News

Mississippi's only Level 1 trauma center and teaching hospital announced Friday it will now mandate all employees and students to be vaccinated against COVID-19. The policy is a reversal from a previous rule put in place last month that allowed employees or students to skip the vaccine if they agreed to wear an N95 mask while on campus.

In a letter Friday, a top official at the University of Mississippi Medical Center said it's time for the institution to take aggressive action. Mississippi now has the highest per capita rate of new COVID-19 cases in the United States, according to the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 case tracker.

"COVID-19 in Mississippi is a raging wildfire but not everyone is helping throw water on the flames in their own backyard," wrote Dr. Alan Jones, University of Mississippi Medical Center's associate vice chancellor for clinical affairs. "We - as an institution and as the workforce for the state's leading health system - need to be a leader in this fight."

The University of Mississippi Medical Center's policy requires that employees and students be vaccinated against COVID-19 by Nov. 1.

Vaccinations will be required to be completed in phases: by Sept. 15, all managers and supervisors must be vaccinated; by Oct. 1, all other employees; by Nov. 1, all students.

Those who refuse vaccination may face "corrective action up to and including termination or dismissal," according to Jones's letter. He said those seeking accommodations must submit requests by Sept. 10.

"Mississippians getting vaccinated is the most effective weapon in the arsenal as we battle this pandemic," he wrote.

COVID-19-related hospitalizations in Mississippi are now being recorded at levels not previously seen during the pandemic - 1,660 people were hospitalized with the virus in the state on Wednesday.

John's Hopkins' tracker showed that as of Thursday, Mississippi had 120 new cases of COVID-19 per 100,000 residents. Louisiana was next-highest at 113 cases per 100,000, then Florida at 102.

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Courtesy Leah Willingham.  Willingham is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America  is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on under-covered issues.