Qatar Airways has quietly become one of the very few airlines that can boast of having 100 per cent of operating cabin crew vaccinated against COVID-19 and it did so, a spokesperson says, without ever having to issue a formal mandate for employees to get vaccinated or get fired.
The news that Qatar Airways has achieved what few other airlines have managed comes at a time that corporations are weighing up the benefits of issuing vaccine mandates. The pressure to decide has become even greater after United Airlines became the first U.S. carrier to announce compulsory employee vaccination.
That announcement was quickly followed by similar vaccine mandates from Frontier and Hawaiian Airlines but the likes of American Airlines and Southwest are standing firm in their decision to leave vaccination as an individual choice. Delta Air Lines is likely to issue a mandate as soon as a vaccine gets full FDA approval.
There are obvious ethical and legal questions to be considered before issuing a vaccine mandate and so it’s no surprise that some airlines aren’t immediately following in the lead of United. Eventually, however, it might transpire that duty of care obligations dictate mandatory vaccination (an issue that Alaska Airlines is considering) but we’re not quite there yet.
So how did Qatar Airways achieve 100 per cent crew vaccination without threatening dismissal against vaccine-hesitant workers?
Unlike the United States, cabin crew in Qatar weren’t immediately prioritised for the vaccine and supply issues meant that Qatar hasn’t had a surplus of vaccines that are going to waste either. But when crew did become eligible, they had a simple choice – get vaccinated or have an invasive COVID-19 test every few days to prove your negative status.
It appears that the incentive of avoiding regular testing, alongside education and incentives, was enough to convince enough cabin crew to get vaccinated without…