Adverse reaction to COVID-19 vaccine: Is it OSHA recordable? [UPDATE]
OSHA recently provided clarification on the recordability of vaccine-related adverse reactions. The bottom line is employers only have to record adverse reactions to the COVID-19 vaccine if they required the employee to get the vaccine (and the adverse reaction meets the general recording criteria, e.g., medical treatment beyond first aid, lost worktime, etc.).
Although adverse reactions to recommended COVID-19 vaccines may be recordable under the recordkeeping requirements, OSHA is exercising its enforcement discretion to only require the recording of adverse effects to required vaccines at this time. This discretion holds true for scenarios where employers recommend but do not require vaccines, including where the employer makes the COVID-19 vaccine available to employees at work, offers the vaccine as part of a voluntary wellness program at work, or makes arrangements for employees to receive the vaccine at an offsite location. For this discretion to apply, OSHA says the vaccine must be truly voluntary.
UPDATE: In a major about-face, OSHA now says that employers do NOT have to record adverse side effects from COVID-19 vaccinations, even if the employer mandates workers get the vaccine. OSHA will not enforce recording rules for worker side effects from COVID-19 vaccinations through May 2022.
SOURCE: COVID-19 Frequently Asked Questions; OSHA webpage (scroll down to Vaccine-Related)

![Adverse reaction to COVID-19 vaccine: Is it OSHA recordable? [UPDATE]](https://jjkellercompliancenetwork.com/media-library/image.jpg?id=30008262&width=1245&height=700&quality=50&coordinates=0%2C0%2C0%2C0)















































