The Department of Defense has administered more than one million COVID-19 vaccinations.
The milestone came as the United States surpassed 500,000 deaths from COVID-19 and just over two months after the Food and Drug Administration issued the first emergency use authorization for a vaccine for the prevention of coronavirus disease in individuals 16 years of age and older.
"On (Feb 22), we surpassed more than 1 million COVID-19 vaccine doses and continue to reach new daily administration highs," said Army Lt. Gen. (Dr.) Ronald Place, director of the Defense Health Agency, in a message to DOD medical teams. "Thank you for your due diligence and attention to detail as we continue to safely vaccinate our beneficiaries."
DOD continues to distribute and administer vaccines to Military Health System beneficiaries at more than 300 military medical treatment facilities around the world, following a phased population schema as part of the federal government's COVID-19 response.
As of Feb. 25, DOD has administered 1,087,625 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine; 713,624 recipients have received the initial dose and of those, 374,001 people have received both doses.
Although winter weather and logistics have affected the availability of doses at each military medical treatment facility, the DOD has over a 90% utilization rate, according to Air Force Col. (Dr.) Tonya Rans, chief of the Defense Health Agency's Immunization Healthcare Division, demonstrating that the quantity of vaccine reaching immunization sites is quickly reaching arms.
"The credit for reaching this milestone belongs to all those involved at every stage of DOD's COVID-19 implementation plan," said Rans. "But special recognition goes to the personnel at DOD immunization sites, who professionally engage with and educate their beneficiary populations, diligently review and improve workflow capabilities, and collaborate both within and across service lines to maximize beneficiary outreach."
"Every dose of vaccine administered helps protect our loved ones, colleagues, and neighbors against COVID-19 in addition to bringing us closer to an end to this pandemic," she explained.
However, "it is important to reflect that over 500,000 U.S. individuals have lost their lives to COVID-19," she added. "The sobering stories of lives lost is a powerful motivator to efficiently yet safely provide vaccine to those who wish to receive it as quickly as possible."
Working Together
All DOD MTFs are doing their part. At the David Grant U.S. Air Force Medical Center, at Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield, California, some beneficiaries were vaccinated within 24 hours of the base receiving its initial shipment in December 2020.
"We developed a safe, efficient method to distribute vaccines that keeps pace with the highest FEMA [Federal Emergency Management Agency] distribution capabilities," said Air Force Col. Gwen Foster, commander of the 60th Medical Group at Travis. "In just two, one-day points-of-dispensing efforts, we were able to exhaust our supply during the holidays."
Since then, DGMC, the Air Force Medical Service's flagship medical treatment facility in the United States, hasn't stopped administering vaccines.
"We have a sustained vaccination effort at DGMC to vaccinate daily, ensuring we reach eligible beneficiaries according to the vaccination schema and avoid vaccine waste," said Foster.
The MTF provides health care to more than 130,000 TRICARE eligible patients in the immediate San Francisco-Sacramento vicinity and more than 377,000 from the Department of Veterans Affairs Northern California Health Care System. In the two months since having received its first vaccine shipment, DGMC has advanced vaccination administration to beneficiaries in phase 1B, which includes Department of Defense personnel who comprise the strategic national mission force, service members preparing to deploy, beneficiaries aged 75 or older, and frontline essential workers.
"Our goal is to vaccinate as many people as we safely can, but we are limited by our logistics chain," said Foster.
At the same time, the medical center continues to vaccinate beneficiaries from phase 1A, which includes medical personnel and first responders.
"More and more of the personnel these tiers are opting to get the vaccine as they begin to see its safety and efficacy," she said.
Foster added that being a part of reaching the DOD's 1 millionth vaccine administration has been a great source of pride for Travis AFB and DGMC. "This pride runs even deeper when we realize our contribution to our DOD beneficiary population reaching this historic landmark: That we were able to quickly and safely administer some of the first vaccines in the United States, and that most personnel vaccinated in our initial efforts were within the first 1 million to 2 million people vaccinated nationwide," she said.
DOD's milestone comes in parallel to the U.S., just surpassing administration of 65 million total doses.
"We are humbled and honored to have contributed to these vaccination efforts that will save lives, prevent suffering, and ensure the national defense mission continues," Foster said.
And even though there have been some challenges, "learning from them makes us better as airmen, as an air force, and ultimately as a nation," said Foster.
For Blanchfield Army Community Hospital in Fort Campbell, Kentucky, vaccination administration has progressed to phase 1C, which includes all beneficiaries between 65 and 74 years of age, those between 16 and 64 years of age with increased risk for severe illness as described by the CDC, and essential workers not previously included in phases 1A and 1B.