USA TODAY International Edition

Kroger Health to administer COVID- 19 vaccines

- Chris Mayhew Colleen Lindholz Kroger Health president

Kroger Health, a health care division of the Kroger Co., has said it will provide coronaviru­s vaccines nationwide through its pharmacy and clinic locations.

The Cincinnati- based national grocery chain will hire nearly 1,000 people for jobs that include pharmacy technician­s and other positions to support operations and the administra­tion of the COVID- 19 vaccine, according to a company news release.

Kroger did not specify when COVID- 19 vaccines might become available, pointing to partnershi­ps with federal and state health department­s “to administer the vaccine in accord

“The size and scale of our health care operation provides us with the unique ability to efficientl­y facilitate COVID- 19 testing and immunize a large portion of the U. S. population, once the authorized vaccines become more widely available.” ance with the rollout plan,” according to the release.

Ohio has split its early vaccine supply between health care workers and nursing home residents, according to a Dec. 22 Cincinnati Enquirer article.

Kroger Health has more than 2,200 pharmacies and 220 clinics in 35 states, according to the release. Kroger Health employs about 22,000 health care practition­ers including pharmacist­s, nurse practition­ers, dietitians and technician­s, according to the release.

“The size and scale of our health care operation provides us with the unique ability to efficiently facilitate COVID- 19 testing and immunize a large portion of the U. S. population, once the authorized vaccines become more widely avail

able,” said Colleen Lindholz, Kroger Health's president, in the release.

Lindholtz said Kroger has already provided patients, employees and other businesses with diagnostic testing tools and support resources since the onset of the public health crisis.

Kroger Health worked closely in the last few months with the federal department­s of Health and Human Services and Defense, pharmaceut­ical companies and other businesses to prepare for the vaccine authorizat­ion, according to the release.

Priority population­s as defined by federal and state government­s will be focused on first now that the U. S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has approved vaccines from Pfizer- BioNTech and Moderna, according to the release.

In Alaska, Kroger Health is starting this week to administer the PfizerBioNTec­h vaccine in Anchorage and Juneau to health care workers in partnershi­p with the state, according to the release.

Kroger continues to advocate for essential workers, including Kroger associates, to have priority access to the vaccine, according to the release.

“We are strongly encouragin­g all customers and associates to receive the vaccine to curb the spread of COVID- 19 in our communitie­s, and we'll do all we can to ensure they have access as soon as it's available,” said Dr. Marc Watkins, Kroger Health's chief medical officer in the release.

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