Pentagon set to make Pfizer vaccine mandatory after FDA approval
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[August 24, 2021]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon
is preparing to issue updated guidance to require all U.S. service
personnel to be vaccinated after Monday's approval of the Pfizer Inc/BioNTech
SE COVID-19 vaccine by the Food and Drug Administration, Pentagon
spokesman John Kirby said.
Kirby told a briefing the completion date for vaccine guidance was still
being worked on.
The FDA granted full approval on Monday to the vaccine, which had
earned emergency-use authorization in December, making it the first to
secure such validation as U.S. health authorities struggle to win over
vaccine skeptics.
Asked if similar guidance could be given for other COVID-19 vaccines,
Kirby replied: "Right now we're focused on the Pfizer vaccine because of
the FDA approval that came in this morning."
The Pentagon said this month it would seek President Joe Biden's
approval by mid-September to require 1.3 million military members to get
vaccinated against COVID-19.
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. Biden said then he strongly
supported the Pentagon's plan to add the COVID-19 vaccine to the list of
required vaccinations for service members by mid-September.
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has said the deadline could be moved
up if the FDA approved the vaccine earlier.
The U.S. military said this month that 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.
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A United States Navy officer from the amphibious ship USS San Diego
(LPD 22) receives a vaccine against Coronavirus (COVID-19) at the
navy port in Manama, Bahrain in this picture taken February 26, 2021
and released by U.S Navy on February 27, 2021. Brandon Woods/U.S.
Navy/Handout via REUTERS
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, compared with
the U.S. national average of about 60% of adults ages 18 and over.
Because U.S. service members are generally younger and fitter,
relatively few of them have died as a result of COVID-19 - just 28
in total, according to Pentagon data.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali and David Brunnstrom; editing by Jonathan
Oatis)
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