Much of the CDC Is Working Remotely. That Could Make Changing the Agency Difficult.
ATLANTA 鈥 Earlier this year, top leadership at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began a monumental task: turning the sprawling, labyrinthine organization known for its highly specialized, academically focused scientific research into a sleek, flexible public health response agency primed to serve the American public. It鈥檚 an attempt to keep the CDC from repeating the mistakes it made while responding to covid-19.
But agency veterans, outside public health officials, and workplace organization experts said the current workplace structure could be a major barrier to that goal. Like directors before her, agency head Dr. Rochelle Walensky spends a considerable amount of time away from the CDC鈥檚 headquarters in Atlanta. The agency has also embraced a workplace flexibility program that has allowed most of its scientists to stay remote.
As of October, 10,020 of the CDC鈥檚 12,892 full-time employees 鈥 78% of the full-time workforce 鈥 were allowed to work remotely all or part of the time, according to data that KHN obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request.
Experts said the lack of face-to-face work will likely be a substantial obstacle to the top leadership鈥檚 effort to overhaul the agency after its failures during the pandemic 鈥 a botched testing rollout, confusing safety guidance, the slow release of scientific research, and a loss of public trust.
They also wondered whether Walensky, who frequently works remotely while traveling, can bring about that change from afar and whether a virtual workforce might experience more challenges battling infectious diseases than one working together in person.
鈥淥ne of the things that a really strong new leader would do is they鈥檇 be visible, they鈥檇 be walking the halls, they鈥檇 have the open door,鈥 said , a professor of management science and engineering at Stanford University. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 much harder to accomplish when nobody鈥檚 there.鈥
Key to is changing its institutional culture, which the agency says is at the core of all its work 鈥 from how it interacts with other agencies to how it shares its research. the CDC needs to be faster and nimbler in the face of emergencies and more communicative, both internally and with the public.
A flexible, responsive, and collaborative culture thrived not too long ago 鈥 during the Obama administration, when the agency handled crises such as the and the , said , who worked at the CDC for four decades before retiring this year. 鈥淚 would like to see every effort made to try to restore that culture to the extent possible, because CDC will potentially lose some of its excellence if it can鈥檛,鈥 he said.
Changes, such as the transition to a largely remote workforce and a ballooning bureaucracy, he said, made it 鈥渁lmost impossible to get anything done鈥 in his later years at the agency.
, a professor at Cornell University鈥檚 School of Industrial and Labor Relations, said that institutional culture includes 鈥渢he unwritten rules of how work gets done鈥 and that those are hard to learn in a remote work environment.
A largely remote workplace, Collins said, can lead to weaker social connections among staffers, which can ultimately result in less understanding of and investment in the institution鈥檚 values. A loss of personal interaction can also suppress innovation. 鈥淚f you believe great new ideas come from people bumping ideas up against each other, you want to try and create an environment where that happens as often as possible,鈥 he said.
A document that outlines the CDC鈥檚 policy and that was last updated in April says remote work can help recruit and retain staffers, keep workers happy, and reduce the cost of leased office space. It followed from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management encouraging agencies across the federal government to consider remote work options for staff, considering their utility during the covid-19 pandemic.
As of early 2020, much of the workforce of the FDA and the National Institutes of Health was working remotely. Today, the NIH is mostly back in the office, but the FDA said many of its employees continue to work remotely when possible. And while the White House COVID-19 Task Force and held in-person news conferences, its briefings became largely remote events.
Still, Walensky has recently faced pointed skepticism about the workforce flexibility policy from lawmakers, who questioned her ability to remake the CDC with a dispersed staff.
, U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) quoted remarks that a former acting CDC director had made : 鈥溾業 don鈥檛 know how you motivate and inspire culture change when people aren鈥檛 together.鈥欌
鈥淧eople at the CDC are working well, they鈥檙e working hard, and they don鈥檛 necessarily need to be on-site in Atlanta,鈥 Walensky responded. 鈥淚n fact, oftentimes, they鈥檙e more productive off-site.鈥
Walensky added that agency staff deployments are common and that many lab staffers, who can鈥檛 work from home, are reporting to CDC offices.
Leading the agency also isn鈥檛 a traditional office job.
鈥淭he role of CDC director has historically involved a significant amount of official travel around the globe; requiring the director to be mobile and able to work from anywhere,鈥 Jason McDonald, a CDC spokesperson, said in a statement. 鈥淒r. Walensky splits her time between CDC domestic sites around the country, Washington, D.C., state health departments, and internationally where CDC has a presence in 60 countries.鈥
KHN spoke with multiple CDC employees working remotely. They declined to speak on the record because of concerns about job security.
They said the remote work policy had no impact on their work but acknowledged that reduced opportunities for in-person interaction could make some CDC staff members feel less connected to their managers and peers 鈥 and to the agency鈥檚 mission.
That lack of personal connection can lead to a lack of trust, which can keep important conversations from happening, said Hinds, the Stanford professor. 鈥淲e鈥檙e much more willing to be open, ask difficult questions, bring up problems when we have actually sat down with somebody face-to-face and gotten to know them a little bit better,鈥 she said.
A remote work environment also makes it harder for an incoming leader who has no experience inside an organization to truly understand its quirks, Hinds said. Walensky was an external hire and before her appointment as CDC director. And booking time for a video or phone call with a new boss to help them learn about an institution is 鈥渁 big hurdle,鈥 Hinds said, compared with bumping into them in the hallway or at the coffee cart.
In her early days working at the CDC, said, she relished informal interactions with co-workers and called such unscheduled time creative and productive. 鈥淚 think you lose some things when you don鈥檛 have the informal mentoring and the visibility, perhaps the greater sensitivity to who鈥檚 struggling, who needs help,鈥 Schuchat said.
She spent more than three decades at the agency, including two stints as acting director, before . Her departure came on the heels of that of , Dr. Nancy Messonnier.
Schuchat said that working remotely part time was encouraged at the CDC before the pandemic because of a lack of office space. She said she imagined that many staffers were indeed more productive while working remotely, despite the possible costs to the agency鈥檚 culture.
Many people have fled the U.S. public health workforce in recent years, burned out from the covid-19 response. Public health experts said that keeping talent requires offering benefits such as remote work 鈥 especially when it鈥檚 hard to offer competitive salaries 鈥 and getting staffers to believe in an agency鈥檚 mission.
But, the experts said, in-person interactions can lead to strong allegiances and investment in an organization, which can translate to better retention.
鈥淭hey generally want to feel like their work is important and that they鈥檙e valued,鈥 said , who has led the Connecticut Department of Public Health since July 2021. 鈥淎nd the workplace allows for that a little bit more so than just sitting in front of the computer.鈥
that transforming the CDC鈥檚 culture from one that鈥檚 methodical and academic to one that鈥檚 focused on quick action won鈥檛 be easy. Other experts agree on the need for the pivot.
鈥淭hey tend to be an agency that studies things and then, in their own sweet time, responds, versus being an emergency response agency,鈥 said , executive director of the American Public Health Association.
Overhauling that culture will be a big challenge, with high stakes, for the agency tasked with protecting the public health of all Americans. Benjamin said the CDC would likely have made its pandemic stumbles even if staffers hadn鈥檛 been working remotely. But coming to terms with those mistakes 鈥 and rebuilding the agency to keep them from happening in the future 鈥 could be easier and more sustainable if more people were working together in person, he said.
鈥淗ow do you become part of a culture, how do you become part of a holistic organization, if you鈥檙e not together?鈥 he said. 鈥淲hile I鈥檓 not disturbed that they鈥檙e not back, my advice is to get there as quickly as they can.鈥