Sentinel & Enterprise

Veterans get ounce of prevention

- By The Associated Press

BOSTON » With a thumbs up and a round of applause from staff, Air Force veteran Robert Aucoin on Tuesday became the first resident of the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home in Massachuse­tts to get vaccinated against the coronaviru­s.

“Great, great, leading the way,” Aucoin, 78, said through his Snoopy mask after getting the first shot of the Pfizer vaccine.

Aucoin, who has lived at the state-run home since 2018, served from 1961 to 1965 and worked as the control tower operator at Pope Air Force Base in North Carolina during his service, according to the state Executive Office of Health and Human Services. The state has made it a priority to get the residents of both the Holyoke facility and the Chelsea Soldier’s Home vaccinated after the coronaviru­s tore through both facilities for veterans who require long-term care in the spring.

Staff vaccinatio­ns also started Tuesday.

“Administer­ing vaccines to our frontline health care workers and now some of our most vulnerable residents in the Soldiers’ Home provides relief and hope that there are brighter days ahead for all,” Gov. Charlie Baker said.

The Holyoke home had one of the country’s deadliest virus outbreaks at a long-term care facility. Seventy-six residents died after contractin­g the virus in the spring and a 77 th died earlier this month. More than 30 residents of the Chelsea home died after contractin­g the disease.

An investigat­ion into the Holyoke outbreak by a formal federal prosecutor hired found that management at the home made several “utterly baffling” decisions that helped the disease run rampant.

Two former top administra­tors have pleaded not guilty to criminal negligence charges connected to the deaths.

In Chelsea, World War II veteran Dominic Pitella, 94, was the first resident to be vaccinated.

Pitella, a former corporal and cook with the 559th Air Service Group, served in the Pacific Theater during World War II.

“I’m hopeful this will help everybody,” Pitella said in a statement.

 ?? JESSICA RINALDI/BOSTON GLOBE, POOL PHOTO ?? Dominic Pitella, a U.S. Army Corps veteran who served in World War II waves after receiving the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday. Pitella was the first veteran to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at the Soldiers Home in Chelsea.
JESSICA RINALDI/BOSTON GLOBE, POOL PHOTO Dominic Pitella, a U.S. Army Corps veteran who served in World War II waves after receiving the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday. Pitella was the first veteran to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at the Soldiers Home in Chelsea.

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