
Oklahoma was granted a temporary restraining order that blocks Ascension Healthcare from terminating employees who were denied religious exemptions from the firmโs COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
Oklahoma Attorney General John OโConnor had filed for a restraining order against the companyโs requirement. On the night of Nov. 12, a Tulsa district judge granted the request, according to the OโConnorโs office.
โThis evening, the Tulsa District Court granted the Stateโs Application for Temporary Restraining Order in our case to keep Ascension Healthcare from carrying out its plan to fire employees who were unfairly denied religious exemptions from their nationwide COVID-19 vaccination mandate,โ the Republican attorney general said in a statement. โThis is a win for religious freedom and our office will continue to fight against unlawful religious discrimination.โ
Some Ascension employees who worked during the pandemic, he said, sought a religious exemption to the vaccine but were unfairly denied.
โHealthcare heroes who sought a religious exemption on this and other sincerely held religious belief grounds have been flatly rejected by Ascension,โ OโConnor remarked. โIn so doing, Ascension committed religious discrimination against Oklahoma healthcare heroes who oppose abortion.โ
Ascension Healthcare operates in 19 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, including across Oklahoma. The company has not responded to a request for comment. The company is based in St. Louis, Missouri.
The firm, however, issued a statement to media outlets over the weekend that it mandated the vaccine because โwe want patients to be assured and comforted with the knowledge that our doctors and nurses, other clinicians and associates, working in one of our hospitals or other sites of care, will either be vaccinated against both COVID-19 and influenza.โ
Ascension Healthcare in July announced it would require its employees to receive the vaccine by Nov. 12 or face termination.
Last week, Ascension workers in Tulsa demonstrated outside Ascension St. Johnโs against the firmโs vaccine requirement.
Byย Jack Phillips