Dayton Daily News

» VA to make vaccines more widely available Sunday,

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

The Department of Veterans Affairs in Dayton will have a walk-in clinic this Sunday open to all veterans in the Dayton area, their spouses, widows, widowers and caregivers.

The clinic will administer the Johnson & Johnson/Janssen vaccine only, the Dayton VA said in a release Tuesday.

Veterans do not have to be enrolled in the VA health care system to get vaccinated.

No appointmen­t is needed; the clinic is open on a firstcome, first-serve basis.

Clinic hours will be 8 am until 1 pm Sunday, April 11.

The clinic is in Primary Care, building 341. Plenty of parking is available on the Dayton VA campus, 4100 W Third St.

President Joe Biden signed the “Save Lives” Act into law last month, expanding VA’s legal authority to provide COVID-19 vaccines to all veterans, regardless of their VA health care enrollment status, as well as veteran spouses, caregivers and some beneficiar­ies.

The act removed some of the legal limits on the medical care VA can provide to veterans, based on health care eligibilit­y and priority groups.

The expanded authority depends on readily available COVID-19 vaccine supply and requires VA to continue to prioritize vaccinatio­ns and healthcare delivery for veterans enrolled in VA care.

The act “increases the number of individual­s who are eligible to get lifesaving COVID-19 vaccines from VA from 9.5 million to more than 33 million,” VA Secretary Denis McDonough said March 24.

“Meeting the task of vaccinatin­g this expanded population will be a tremendous undertakin­g for the VA and will require a significan­t increase in our allocation of vaccine supply, but I am confident that VA’s workforce is up to the task.”

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