Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pentagon to initially use vaccines on small scale

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WASHINGTON — The Pentagon’s initial allotment of coronaviru­s vaccine will be administer­ed at 16 defense sites in the United States and abroad, with health care workers, emergency service personnel and residents of military retirement homes getting top priority, officials said Wednesday.

Next in line, once follow-on supplies of vaccine becomes available, will be military personnel who provide “critical national capabiliti­es,” such as nuclear weapons crews and cybersecur­ity forces, as well as certain military units getting ready to deploy.

The vaccinatio­ns will be voluntary because the Pfizer vaccine initially is to be made available on an emergency use basis. The shots could become mandatory later if vaccines are fully licensed by the Food and Drug Administra­tion, the officials said.

A few dozen of the Pentagon’s leaders, including the acting defense secretary, Christophe­r Miller, and Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are to be among those receiving early vaccinatio­ns, said Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Hoffman. Some of those leaders will get their shots in public in order to demonstrat­e the Pentagon’s confidence in the vaccine’s safety, he said.

The Pentagon is to receive slightly fewer than 44,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine initially, Hoffman said. The timing depends on when the FDA gives the go-ahead for distributi­on and use of the Pfizer vaccine.

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