Trump Administration Unveils Plan to Distribute COVID-19 Vaccine to All Americans

Trump Administration Unveils Plan to Distribute COVID-19 Vaccine to All Americans
A research associate works in a laboratory at Imperial College in London on July 30, 2020. (Kristy Wigglesworth/AP Photo)
Tom Ozimek
9/16/2020
Updated:
9/16/2020

Federal authorities on Sept. 16 released a distribution strategy and a planning playbook to make the CCP virus vaccine available to all Americans for free.

“As part of Operation Warp Speed, we have been laying the groundwork for months to distribute and administer a safe and effective COVID-19 vaccine as soon as it meets FDA’s gold standard,” Alex Azar, secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), said in a statement.
The two documents—a distribution strategy (pdf) and playbook (pdf)—were released jointly by HHS and the Department of Defense. They outline the Trump administration’s plans for the delivery of COVID-19 vaccine doses to all Americans interested in getting it.

In the playbook, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) outlines a complex plan to distribute the vaccine, starting with essential workers and other specified groups, before eventually making it available to every American interested in getting it.

“Early in the COVID-19 Vaccination Program, there may be a limited supply of COVID-19 vaccine, and vaccination efforts may focus on those critical to the response, providing direct care, and maintaining societal function, as well as those at highest risk for developing severe illness from COVID-19,” the CDC states.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, who is also chairman of the President's Task Force on the Novel Coronavirus, speaks at the Health and Human Services headquarters in Washington on Feb. 7, 2020. (Jacquelyn Martin/ File/AP Photo)
Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, who is also chairman of the President's Task Force on the Novel Coronavirus, speaks at the Health and Human Services headquarters in Washington on Feb. 7, 2020. (Jacquelyn Martin/ File/AP Photo)

Civilian health workers will be administering the vaccine, while the Pentagon is helping coordinate supply, production, and distribution of vaccine doses.

The vaccination campaign is to begin gradually in January or possibly later this year, according to the documents.

The campaign is “much larger in scope and complexity than seasonal influenza or other previous outbreak-related vaccination responses,” the playbook states, with most vaccines expected to require two doses, three to four weeks apart. There will be no direct charge for the vaccine, with taxpayers footing the bill from congressionally approved funds.

The initial vaccination thrust will focus on protecting essential workers, including health staff, as well as the vulnerable. Priorities for the first phase are still being finalized, the strategy document indicates, with the CDC and the National Academy of Medicine among those working on the concept. Vaccinations are to be made available to everyone in follow-up phases.

States and local communities will need to come up with specific plans for receiving and locally distributing vaccines, some of which will require special handling, including refrigeration or freezing. States and cities have a month to submit such plans.

The documents have been released under the umbrella of Operation Warp Speed, a White House-backed initiative to have millions of doses ready to ship once a vaccine is granted what is expected to be an emergency-use approval by the Food and Drug Administration. Several formulations of the vaccine are undergoing final trials.

President Donald Trump on Sept. 15 said the COVID-19 vaccine will be ready in the near future.

“I want the vaccine fast,” the president said in an interview with Fox News. “You wouldn’t have a vaccine for years ... I speeded up the process with the FDA. ... We’re going to have a vaccine in a matter of weeks, it could be four weeks, it could be eight weeks. ... We have a lot of great companies.”

In the interview, Trump said the United States is making progress fighting the virus.

“We’re rounding the turn on the pandemic,” he said.