Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
(Reviewed January 19, 2024)
COVID-19 has brought on much uncertainty and raised many questions. NYSDA recognizes the importance of providing our members with information that will protect both patients and dental health care personnel. Below is a compiled list of the most frequently asked questions and answers.
How do I manage employee leave? What is the paid leave requirement in NYS when a staff member tests positive for COVID-19?
The New York State COVID-19 Paid Sick Leave Legislation guarantees leave to employees who are subject to a mandatory or precautionary order of quarantine or isolation issued by the State of New York, the New York State Department of Health, a local board of health, or any other authorized governmental entity due to COVID-19.
Specifically, the law requires:
-- Private employers with 10 or fewer employees and net income of one million dollars or less in the previous tax year to provide unpaid sick leave until the termination of the quarantine/isolation order.
-- Private employers with 10 or fewer employees and net income over one million dollars in the previous tax year and private employers with between 11 and 99 employees, regardless of income, to provide at least five (5) days of paid sick leave, followed by unpaid sick leave until the termination of the quarantine/isolation order.
-- Private employers with 100 or more employees to provide at least 14 days of paid sick leave, followed by unpaid sick leave until the termination of the quarantine/isolation order.
-- Public employers, regardless of size, to provide at least 14 days of paid sick leave during the quarantine/isolation order, paid at the employee/officer's "regular rate of pay for those regular hours during which [he or she] is absent from work" due to the order. For purposes of this provision, the term "public employer" includes, but is not limited to, the state, counties, cities, towns, villages, school districts and BOCES, government entities operating colleges or universities, public improvement or special districts, and public authorities, commissions, and benefit corporations.
Do I still need to implement COVID protocols in my practice?
On March 17, 2022, the designation of COVID-19 as an airborne infectious disease that presents a serious risk of harm to the public health under the NYS HERO Act ended. Private sector employers, including private dental practices, are no longer required to implement their workforce safety plans.
Although there is no executive order in place for private dental practices, many COVID-19 protocols are recommended by the CDC. Private dental practices should use professional judgement when determining practice policies.
How do I address a COVID-19 exposure or positive case with staff?
The NYS Department of Health has updated its Advisory on Return-to-Work Protocols for Healthcare Personnel with SARS-CoV-2 Infection or Exposure to SARS-CoV-2.
Notwithstanding official designations by a governmental body, private dental practices may decide if the staffing shortages they are facing are "conventional," "contingency" or "crisis."
Work Restrictions for Healthcare Personnel | ||||
| Vaccination status | Conventional | Contingency | Crisis |
Infected | Boosted, fully vaccinated | CDC Conventional Strategies: 10 days; or 7 days with negative test; asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic and improving | NYSDOH Shortening Isolation: 5 days, asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic and improving | Facilities contact NYSDOH and follow CDC Crisis Strategies |
UN-boosted, fully vaccinated | CDC Conventional Strategies: 10 days; or 7 days with negative test; asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic and improving | NYSDOH Shortening Isolation: 5 days, asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic and improving | Facilities contact NYSDOH and follow CDC Crisis Strategies | |
Not fully vaccinated | CDC Conventional Strategies: 10 days; or 7 days with negative test; asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic and improving | CDC Conventional Strategies: 10 days; or 7 days with negative test; asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic and improving | Facilities contact NYSDOH and follow CDC Crisis Strategies | |
Exposed | Boosted, fully vaccinated | CDC Conventional Strategies: No work restrictions, negative test on days 2 and 5-7 | CDC Contingency Strategies: No work restrictions | CDC Crisis Strategies: No work restrictions |
UN-boosted, fully vaccinated | CDC Conventional Strategies: 10 days, or 7 days with negative test | CDC Contingency Strategies: No work restrictions with negative tests on days 1, 2, 3, and 5-7 | CDC Crisis Strategies: No work restrictions (test if possible). | |
Not fully vaccinated | CDC Conventional Strategies: 10 days, or 7 days with negative test | CDC Contingency Strategies: No work restrictions with negative tests on days 1, 2, 3, and 5-7 | CDC Crisis Strategies: No work restrictions (test if possible). |
Can I establish a vaccine mandate for employees in my practice?
It is legally permissible to require a vaccine mandate for your employees, but it is not without liability risks, and must be done carefully and correctly to avoid those risks. NYSDA advises members to review the matter thoroughly with their attorneys. Matters to review are:
- how to handle religious objections, objections based on employee disabilities and objections arising from medical contraindications;
- liability coverage for risks of adverse reactions to mandatory vaccinations;
- how to handle employee refusals to be vaccinated;
- how to handle employee privacy rights when an employer retains employee medical information and what can and cannot be asked of an employee regarding medical information or disclosed to others, such as patients;
- how to handle breakthrough infections should they occur for vaccinated employees.
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) Guidance
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has issued guidance for employers on office policies in relation to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. The EEOC notes that while mandatory COVID-19 employee vaccination policies are permissible, there are many legal considerations that must be addressed properly. Dental employers wishing to implement a mandatory COVID-19 vaccination policy for employees should contact their attorney for help navigating the legal and liability issues involved. You can read the announcement and summary of the EEOC COVID-19 guidance.
Terminating someone who has a religious objection, disability or medical contraindication for not getting the vaccine can be deemed an illegal act of discrimination. You should always consult your own attorney before asserting non-vaccination as grounds for termination.
Interviewing Potential Employees
It is prohibited to ask medical questions of any person you are interviewing for a job. Once you have made a conditional offer of a job, and prior to the offer being accepted, you can then ask about COVID-19 and vaccination status. The job offer can be withdrawn if the applicant’s answer is not acceptable to you as the employer. This is only applicable if the same process is followed for any applicant offered the same position.
You can advise applicants in advance that they will be asked about their vaccination status and that if an offer is made, the job offer would be conditional based on vaccination status.
How long should I wait to treat a patient who recently tested positive for COVID-19?
Current isolation for the public is 5 days after a positive test and if they are asymptomatic or their symptoms are resolving (without fever for 24 hours), followed by 5 days of wearing a mask at all times when around others or in public. If symptomatic, a person must continue to isolate until no sign of fever for at least 24 hours. It is recommended that treatment of a COVID-19 positive patient is put off until 10 days after sign of symptoms or positive test IF the treatment is not an emergency.
Can a dentist ask a patient for proof of COVID-19 vaccination?
The dentist can ask for proof, but if the real question is whether you can refuse to treat someone who does not produce a vaccination card, or if you refuse to treat an unvaccinated patient generally, then the answer is "no". The only purpose in asking for the card would simply be to verify dates of immunity, which might affect how you chose or conduct treatment/prescribing.
Can a dentist refuse to treat a patient who hasn’t had the COVID-19 vaccine?
COVID-19 is considered a disability in New York State. Similar to HIV, a provider cannot discriminate against a person out of fear of COVID-19. Creating a provision to provide care to only vaccinated persons is not advised. As with any office policy created for your practice, we advise you to seek legal counsel for review. DHCP can safely provide care in a dental practice by adhering to current CDC guidance.
Does a DHCP who is fully vaccinated need to be tested or quarantine if they come in contact with a COVID-19 positive person?
DHCP who have been exposed to a COVID-19 positive person and are fully vaccinated and boosted DO NOT have any work restrictions as long as they do not test positive and no symptoms develop. The CDC recommends testing immediately (but generally not earlier than 24 hours after the exposure) and, if negative, again 5-7 days after the exposure. DHCP should follow all recommended infection prevention and control practices, including wearing proper PPE, monitoring themselves for fever or symptoms consistent with COVID-19, and not reporting to work when ill or if testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Can a dentist terminate an employee who refuses to be vaccinated for COVID-19?
Terminating someone who has a religious objection, a disability or a medical contraindication for not getting the vaccine can be deemed illegally discriminatory, so a dentist should consult their own attorney before asserting non-vaccination as a grounds for termination.
Is it permissible to ask if a job applicant has been vaccinated for COVID-19?
You may not ask job applicants about COVID-19 vaccination status unless you have made an offer of a job to the candidate. Then you may ask as part of a pre-employment physical, provided that the same is done for all other employees and not just that one person. In general, you may never ask job applicants questions about their health unless the issue is directly related to requirements of the job.
Are dentists able to test patients for COVID-19?
Dentists cannot diagnose COVID-19 or COVID-19 immunity, but they can perform physical examinations of patients, which includes ordering and doing certain lab tests.
You must register as a dentist-owned laboratory with the New York State Department of Health POLEP (Physician Owned Laboratory Evaluation Program) and report results. To register with POLEP, go to: https://www.wadsworth.org/regulatory/polep.
CLIA is short for the federal law called the “Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments”. For dentists, these CLIA-waived tests are not for diagnostic purposes, but are screening tools for making appropriate referrals for medical care by physicians where appropriate prior to dental treatment.
View our full Point-of-Care (POC) Testing page for more information.