Place said the DHA is gathering real-time data from the pilot sites to fine-tune any process issues in advance of larger scale distribution. “We are intensely focused on the feedback we are getting because these initial sites form the foundation to validate our distribution, administration, and reporting processes, which will then inform how we expand to additional distribution sites,” he said.
Place added, “It’s also important to recognize the Operation Warp Speed team and our colleagues at the Defense Logistics Agency for their exceptional work over the past week in delivering the vaccine to our medical treatment facilities.”
First shots in arms
Within hours of receiving the shipments, prioritized DoD personnel at each location were in line to receive the vaccine, moving toward “the beginning of the end of the COVID pandemic,” according to Army Col. Martin Doperak, commander of Tripler Army Medical Center in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Until vaccines can be allocated to all of DOD’s 11.1 million personnel, critical medical staff and first responders on the front lines of the COVID fight at each medical facility are first in line.
At Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center aboard Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, Air Force Maj. Andrew Gausepohl, medical director of the 59th Air Wing’s Family Emergency Center, was first in the San Antonio military health system to receive the vaccine Dec. 14.
“It was clearly an honor to be the first in line,” he said. “It wasn’t for me. It was for my patients.” Wilford Hall is part of the San Antonio Medical Health System, the largest among the armed services.
Navy Medical Center San Diego also received its initial shipment Dec. 14 and started vaccinating the following day to healthcare workers within the emergency department and intensive care unit as well as local installation emergency medical services, fire, and police departments from six local Navy and Marine Corps installations it serves.