There is no evidence presented to even imply the LPN worked in Oncology or near the chemo chairs. You’re doing exactly what Savannah is doing by making it sound worse than it is to justify doxing and contacting these people’s job/school to get them fired/expelled.
Trying "to get them fired/expelled" is wrong when it's a matter of social justice and not public health and professional obligation. Chemo is far from the only way to encounter immunocompromised patients, and the fact you narrowed in on that single example strikes me as pretty dishonest. Old people (the other example I gave) are incredibly common, and there's still a significant chunk of them who can't be, or won't be, vaccinated. The elderly are especially common clientele for pharmacies, so that's no excuse.
Setting that aside, you're going to have an uphill battle to convince me that not responding
at all was the correct policy, though, because I find willful malpractice abhorrent. That is exactly what deliberately
falsifying vaccination status is. If the places they work at never wanted to know or never asked, then fine, they have not deemed the vaccination status of personnel essential for patient health, but to deliberately fabricate or lie about vaccination status if they
do require it is unconscionable.
I view this in exactly the same way any sane person would about pedophiles working as elementary school teachers. You give up certain rights when you take on certain jobs, and the ability to lie about whether or not you are susceptible to a disease when your fellow clinicians tell you that you can't is one of them.
I am not "Doing what Savannah" is doing in any way, because I am not publicly broadcasting the workplace or personal details of healthcare professionals (or others) in a way that could cause public pressure to force these institutions to cave, no matter if they do in fact believe it's safe for an unvaccinated person to work in these roles. She should have done this privately and let the hospitals and pharmacies decide how to respond, as appropriate. Her using these cases for clout and turning it into public theatre is obviously ridiculous and she's not likely to stop doing it any time soon.
As are the secretary that scheduled their appointments at check-our and cleaning staff that come in to clean in-patient rooms. They’re still not going to be able to pose much risk by the conspiratorial opinions. (???)
None of those people should be exempt, either, if there is a safety policy in place that requires them to get vaccinated. Generally admin and cleaning keep their distance from inpatients (glass screens, behind desks, now masks/separating barriers, particulate-inducing cleaning only occurs when patients are not the room, etc). LPNs do not, and pharmacy techs can take on all manner of roles depending on where they work, including giving vaccines, which is intimate & high throughput access to people who have reasons to be concerned enough to get a vaccine.
Come off it.