Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Naval officer praised for Portugal’s vaccine rollout

- BARRY HATTON

OEIRAS, Portugal — With Portugal fully vaccinatin­g 85% of the population against covid-19 in nine months, other countries in Europe and beyond want to know how it was accomplish­ed.

A lot of the credit is going to Rear Adm. Henrique Gouveia e Melo. With his team from the three branches of the armed forces, the naval officer took charge of the vaccine rollout in February — perhaps the moment of greatest tension in Portugal over the pandemic.

Along with the rising number of shots, the covid-19 infection rate and hospitaliz­ations from the virus have dropped to their lowest levels in nearly 18 months.

The government announced Thursday that it would scrap most of its remaining covid-19 restrictio­ns starting Oct. 1, though the wearing of face masks will still be mandatory on public transit, in hospitals and care homes, and in shopping malls.

Such a move would be a welcome developmen­t for many countries still in the grip of the highly infectious delta variant and lagging in their own vaccinatio­n rollouts.

Previously unheralded outside the military, Gouveia e Melo is now a household name in Portugal, having made a point of going on television regularly to answer public concerns about the vaccinatio­n program.

Easily recognizab­le even behind a face mask due to his blue eyes, close-cropped saltand-pepper hair and 6-foot-3inch height, he’s often greeted in the street by people wanting to thank him.

“People are very nice,” he says. But the 60-year-old officer also is quick to insist he is just “the tip of the iceberg” in the operation and that many others share the credit.

Military involvemen­t in rolling out the covid-19 vaccine is not uncommon elsewhere, but Portugal has given it the leading role.

It turned out to be an inspired choice: Although Gouveia e Melo’s team works hand-in-hand with health authoritie­s, police and town councils, the military’s expertise has proven invaluable.

“People in the military are used to working under stress in uncertain environmen­ts,” he said at his office in a NATO building near Lisbon that commands a view of the Atlantic. “They’re organized, have a good logistics set-up … and are usually very focused on the mission.”

Gouveia e Melo set the tone of the rollout with his no-nonsense approach and emphasis on discipline. His straight-talking style endeared him to many who worried they might not get vaccinated in time.

In an interview with The Associated Press, he admitted that replacing a political appointee who quit after only three months was “intimidati­ng.”

At the time, Portugal was in the worst phase of the pandemic, when it was among the hardest-hit countries with public hospitals near collapse. Promised vaccine deliveries weren’t arriving. And jockeying for shots was threatenin­g to undermine public trust in the rollout.

“I felt like I had the eyes of 10 million people on me,” Gouveia e Melo said, referring to Portugal’s population.

His 42-year military career helps explain how he handled the pressure.

He was a submarine commander, and at one point was in charge of two of the vessels at the same time — returning to base with one, eating a meal on shore and then taking another out to sea.

Gouveia e Melo also captained a frigate, led Euromarfor, the European Union’s Maritime Force, and has logged the most hours at sea of any serving Portuguese naval officer.

He is unapologet­ic about couching the vaccine rollout as a battle and has worn combat fatigues ever since taking over the effort. He said he wanted to send a message that it was a call to arms.

“This uniform … was symbolic for people to comprehend the need to roll up our sleeves and fight this virus,” he says.

Gouveia e Melo did away with Portugal’s initial efforts to piggyback on establishe­d vaccinatio­n strategies, such as those used annually for flu shots in usually small, public health centers. The demands of scale and speed to address covid-19 required a very different approach.

Portugal began using large sports facilities around the country to set up what Gouveia e Melo called a “production line”: a reception and processing area; a waiting room; cubicles where injections are given; and a recovery area. He used soldiers as guinea pigs at the Lisbon military hospital to figure out the fastest flow of people through a building.

A major push came with what he described as a “tsunami” of vaccine deliveries in mid-June, which allowed a shift into a higher gear.

Tiago Correia, an associate professor in internatio­nal public health at Lisbon’s New University Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, reckons that the public view of Gouveia e Melo as the principal factor in the successful rollout is an “exaggerati­on” of his role.

A key factor, Correia says, is the traditiona­l consenting attitude in Portugal toward national vaccinatio­n programs. Its vaccinatio­n rate for measles, mumps and rubella, for example, is 95% — one of the EU’s highest — and there is no significan­t anti-vaccinatio­n movement.

Even so, Gouveia e Melo’s military background meant he was able to “cut through all the politics” and ensure public trust in the rollout, Correia told AP.

These days, Gouveia e Melo is often greeted with spontaneou­s applause from the public when he visits vaccine centers and poses for selfies. He has been the subject of TikTok videos and poems.

Framed on the wall behind his desk is a drawing given to him by a child who wrote “Obrigado” — “Thank you” — in capital letters.

On a visit Tuesday to a vaccine center at the Lisbon University campus, Gouveia e Melo strode around in his combat fatigues and handed out a cloth crest he designed for the rollout to those waiting for their shots. The emblem, worn by many in the effort, depicts a three-headed hydra lunging at two virus cells, with a green border representi­ng the more than 4,700 people who have worked at Portugal’s vaccine centers.

Claudia Boigues, a 53-yearold waiting in the recovery area with her 15-year-old son who had just been vaccinated, said she marveled at the swift rollout.

“I never thought we’d reach 85%,” she said. “But now we deserve congratula­tions.”

Other countries, which Gouveia e Melo declined to identify because their requests have not been made public, have asked Portugal about its effort.

Gouveia e Melo can now ay “mission accomplish­ed” for his immediate goal. But with significan­t vaccinatio­n hesitancy in some wealthier countries and many poorer countries without sufficient doses, he’s under no illusion that virus variants couldn’t come back to torment Portugal.

“We’ve won a battle,” he says. “I don’t know if we’ve won the war against the virus. This is a world war.”

 ?? (AP/Armando Franca) ?? Rear Admiral Henrique Gouveia e Melo (center) visits a vaccinatio­n center Sept. 11 in Lisbon, Portugal.
(AP/Armando Franca) Rear Admiral Henrique Gouveia e Melo (center) visits a vaccinatio­n center Sept. 11 in Lisbon, Portugal.
 ?? ?? People fill a recovering room Sept. 11 after receiving the coronaviru­s vaccine at a vaccinatio­n center in Lisbon.
People fill a recovering room Sept. 11 after receiving the coronaviru­s vaccine at a vaccinatio­n center in Lisbon.
 ?? ?? A family poses for a picture with Gouveia e Melo on Sept. 11 at a vaccinatio­n center in Lisbon.
A family poses for a picture with Gouveia e Melo on Sept. 11 at a vaccinatio­n center in Lisbon.
 ?? ?? Gouveia e Melo poses for a portrait Sept. 21 outside a vaccinatio­n center in Lisbon.
Gouveia e Melo poses for a portrait Sept. 21 outside a vaccinatio­n center in Lisbon.

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