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Walk-In COVID-19 Vaccinations Welcome At High-Through Put Venues > United States Navy > News-Stories

  At both locations, vaccines will be administered to the first 500 active duty military, DoD civilians, and government contractors with no appointment necessary on a first-come, first-serve basis. “It only takes about 5 minutes for the vaccine process and a 15-minute wait period,” said Cmdr. Suzanne Fierros, force nurse for Commander, Naval Air Force Atlantic (COMNAVAIRLANT). “For an average person, it’s about 20 minutes. If you’ve been flagged receiving a vaccine in the past it will be about 35 minutes.”   The vaccination clinics are provided as a way to increase the opportunity for individuals to receive the vaccine.   “With every shot administered, we are turning the tide on the COVID-19 pandemic and doing our part to keep our force healthy and safe,” said Capt. Laurence J. Kuhn, force surgeon COMNAVAIRLANT.

US military to blend electronic warfare with cyber capabilities

US military to blend electronic warfare with cyber capabilities 2 hours ago With more sophisticated threats, the military wants to blur the line between electronic warfare and cyber operations. (Erik Hildebrandt/U.S. Navy) WASHINGTON The U.S. Navy plans to blur the lines between traditional electronic warfare and cyber operations as it prepares to receive its new airborne electronic jammer, according to a top service official. Cyberspace and the electromagnetic spectrum are inextricably linked, which sometimes leads to arguments over why cyberspace is considered a domain of warfare, yet the electromagnetic spectrum is not. “Now with the ability to do phased array, advanced jamming techniques, we really start to blur the lines, I think, between what we would consider traditional jamming with cyberwarfare,” Rear Adm. John Meier, commander of Naval Air Force Atlantic, said April 13 during remarks at a virtual event hosted by the Association of Old Crows. “I think tha

Navy Has Given 35% of Active-Duty Sailors COVID-19 Vaccines

Navy Has Given 35% of Active-Duty Sailors COVID-19 Vaccines April 8, 2021 5:28 PM U.S. Navy Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Emily Pierce, left, from Bremerton, Washington, assigned to the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74), administers the COVID-19 vaccine to Information Systems Technician 1st Class Correy Bushman, from Rochester, Minnesota, assigned to the John C. Stennis, during a Commander, Naval Air Force Atlantic led vaccination effort in conjunction with Naval Medical Center Portsmouth. US Navy Photo This story has been updated to clarify that 35% of active-duty sailors have been fully vaccinated. Approximately 35 percent of the Navy’s active-duty sailors are fully immunized against COVID-19, according to a service official.

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