Pentagon to seek approval to make COVID-19 vaccines mandatory
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[August 10, 2021]
By Idrees Ali
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Pentagon on
Monday said that it will seek U.S. President Joe Biden's approval by
mid-September to require 1.3 million military members to get vaccinated
against COVID-19, anticipating full regulatory clearance for a vaccine
by then.
After setting COVID-19 rules for federal workers, Biden last month
directed the Pentagon to look into "how and when" it would require
members of the military to take the vaccine.
With the move, the Biden administration deferred a coronavirus vaccine
mandate for active duty troops to next month, with the expectation that
the Food and Drug Administration will give full approval to the Pfizer
Inc and BioNTech SE vaccine.
Currently that vaccine falls under an emergency use authorization.
"I strongly support ... the Department of Defense’s plan to add the
COVID-19 vaccine to the list of required vaccinations for our service
members not later than mid-September," Biden said in a statement.
The date could be moved up if the FDA approves the vaccine earlier, U.S.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said in a memo. Austin said that he could
recommend a different course if the situation worsened.
Two U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the vaccine
could have been immediately mandated, but more than a month was allowed
in the hope of full FDA approval. That action might reduce fears about
the safety of the shot and political blowback from opponents of vaccine
mandates.
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said that the military did not have a
deadline for all troops to be vaccinated.
Top U.S. infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci
has said that he hopes regulators could start granting full approval for
the vaccines as soon as this month.
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Syringes and gloves are pictured as students receive coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) vaccines on the campus of the University of
Memphis in Memphis, Tennessee, U.S., July 22, 2021. REUTERS/Karen
Pulfer Focht/File Photo
The U.S. military says around half the U.S. armed forces are already
fully vaccinated, a number that climbs significantly when counting
only active duty troops and excluding National Guard and reserve
members.
Vaccination rates are highest in the Navy, which suffered from a
high-profile outbreak last year aboard an aircraft carrier. About
73% of sailors are fully vaccinated.
That compares with the U.S. national average of about 60% of adults
ages 18 and over who have been fully vaccinated.
Because U.S. troops are generally younger and fitter, relatively few
U.S. servicemembers have died as a result of COVID-19 - just 28 in
total, according to Pentagon data.
Many congressional Republicans have refused to say publicly whether
they have been vaccinated, and some have attacked the shots as
unnecessary or dangerous.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali; editing by Susan Heavey and Cynthia
Osterman)
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