Department of Commerce (DOC) Secretary Gary Locke,
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen
Sebelius, and Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano today
announced new guidance for businesses to plan for and respond to the
upcoming flu season.
The guidance, released by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), is designed to help employers prepare now for the
impact that seasonal and 2009 H1N1 influenza could have this fall and
winter on their employees and operations.
Employers' plans should address such points as encouraging employees
with flu-like symptoms or illness to stay home, operating with reduced
staffing, and possibly having employees who are at higher risk of
serious medical complications from infection work from home, according
to the CDC guidance.
It is not known whether the 2009 H1N1 influenza virus will cause more
illness or more severe illness in the coming months, but the CDC
recommends that everyone be prepared for influenza. Because seasonal
and 2009 H1N1 influenza pose serious health threats, employers should
work with employees to develop and implement plans that can reduce the
spread of flu, and to encourage seasonal flu vaccination as well as
H1N1 vaccination when that vaccine becomes available.
Secretary Locke suggested businesses set the right tone in the
workplace. That means implementing common sense measures to reduce the
risk of spreading the flu and encouraging workers who are sick to stay
home.
"The President has mobilized the federal government to get America
prepared," DOC Secretary Locke said. "But government can't do it alone.
For this effort to be successful, we need the business community to do
its part." Making the right decisions will not only improve public
health, it also has the potential to protect economic productivity:
Employees who are sick and stay home will not spread the flu in the
workplace.
"This new guidance will help our private sector partners continue to
prepare for the upcoming flu season to keep our economy functioning and
our critical infrastructure secure," said DHS Secretary Napolitano.
"Ensuring business continuity is important to our cooperative efforts
to keep Americans safe."
There are many actions that can be taken to help reduce the spread of
flu. The guidance notes the importance of using these actions,
including regular and frequent hand washing and routine cleaning of
commonly touched surfaces.
"One of the most important things that employers can do is to make sure
their human resources and leave policies are flexible and follow public
health guidance,'' said HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. ``If employees
are sick, they need to be encouraged to stay home. If people begin to
experience flu-like symptoms at work, they should be sent home and
possibly encouraged to seek medical treatment. ''
Employers should review sick leave policies and ensure employees
understand them, according to the guidance. Employers should try to
make sick leave policies flexible for workers who may have to stay home
with ill family members or if a child's school is closed, the CDC says.
Employers should consider offering vaccine against seasonal flu, and
encourage employees to be vaccinated against seasonal and H1N1 flu, the
guidance says.
Employers also might cancel non-essential face-to-face meetings and
travel, and space employees farther apart, the report says. And
employees who are at higher risk for flu complications might be allowed
to work from home or stay home if the flu is severe, it says.
"Keeping our nation's workers safe is a top priority," said Deputy
Secretary of Labor Seth Harris, who participated in the announcement.
"Faced with a renewed H1N1 challenge during the coming flu season, we
are developing tools that will help ensure America's workers stay
healthy and our businesses remain viable."
For more information, visit www.flu.gov.