From Military.com:
“Troops in War Zones May Get
Priority for a COVID-19 Vaccine”
Service members, especially those
deployed to combat zones, will be considered to be among the first to receive a
COVID-19 vaccine, National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins
said Thursday. "In general, military members are considered to have
special priority" for new vaccines and therapies, he said, but stressed
that decisions have yet to be made on who will go to the front of the line. Deciding
which groups will be targeted first for a vaccine still in development is
"not an easy question to ask or answer," he said. "We want to
prioritize those at highest risk," including the elderly, those in nursing
homes and health care providers, Collins explained. In an Aug. 6 American
Enterprise Institute podcast, Dr. Moncef Slaoui, director of the Trump
administration's Operation Warp Speed project to develop a vaccine by January
2021, said that he is working with Collins to convene an "independent
scientific summit" at the National Academy of Sciences to make
recommendations on group priorities. Collins said the summit will likely
convene after Labor Day and make recommendations that would then have to be
approved by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A senior
administration official, who joined Collins on a conference call with
reporters, ruled out a role for the military in the distribution and delivery
of millions of doses of a vaccine once it has been proven to be effective. Army
Gen. Gus Perna, the widely respected head of Army Materiel Command, was brought
on as chief operating officer at Operation Warp Speed for his expertise in
logistics, but the Defense Department's vast capabilities for moving supplies
will not be involved in vaccine distribution, the senior official said. Instead,
a public-private partnership will be formed to deal with distribution, the
official explained. He said Perna's main role is in advising and assisting the
drug companies working on a vaccine in their own production planning and
manufacturing.
^ There shouldn’t be a “may” when
talking about the possibility of making Soldiers, especially those fighting in
warzones, priority of getting a Covid-19 vaccine. Those that want it should get
it over everyone else. ^
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