In
a letter to members of Congress and their staff, Dr. Brian
Monahan said he had been notified by the White House's National
Security Council that Congress "will be provided with a specific
number of COVID-19 vaccine doses to meet long-standing
requirements for continuity of government operations."
He said the "small number of COVID-19 vaccine doses reflects a
fraction of the first tranche of vaccines as it is distributed
throughout the country."
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House of
Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in separate statements
they would be receiving the shot in a few days.
"My recommendation to you is absolutely unequivocal: there is no
reason why you should defer receiving this vaccine. The benefit
far exceeds any small risk," Monahan said in the letter.
He said once members of Congress are vaccinated, Capitol Hill
staff members who are considered essential will be given the
vaccine, and then it will be made available to other staff
members until the doses run out.
The initial 2.9 million doses of a vaccine made by Pfizer Inc
and German partner BioNTech SE began shipping on Sunday to
hospitals across the country.
(Reporting by Eric Beech; Editing by Himani Sarkar and William
Mallard)
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