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Cpl. Danielle O'Connor and Spc. Ryan Tate (right) carry a ulta-cold box container with COVID-19 vaccinations to vehicles the Guard members will use to transport the vaccines to sites across the State, Dec. 15, 2020.
These are the first two boxes of vaccines to be distributed from one of five centralized hubs supporting 11 satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL2 / 9Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Jessica Benson left, Oklahoma State Department of Health, leads Oklahoma National Guardsmen carrying ultra-cold containers with COVID-19 vaccinations to vehicles the Guard members will use to transport the vaccines to sites across the state, Dec. 15, 2020.
These are the first two boxes of vaccines to be distributed from one of five centralized hubs supporting 11 satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL3 / 9Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Oklahoma National Guardsmen prepare to load ulta-cold containers storing COVID-19 vaccinations into vehicles the Guard members will use to transport the vaccines to sites across the State, Dec. 15, 2020.
These are the first two boxes of vaccines to be distributed from one of five centralized hubs supporting 11 satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL4 / 9Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Oklahoma National Guardsmen load an ultra-cold container of COVID-19 vaccinations into an Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicle they will use to transport the vaccines to sites across the state, Dec. 15, 2020.
These are the first two boxes of vaccines to be distributed from one of five centralized hubs supporting 11 satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL5 / 9Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Spc. Martin Gamarra (right) and Airman 1st Class Andreas Owens (left) load an ultra-cold container of COVID-19 vaccinations into an Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicle the two Guard members will use to transport the vaccines to sites across the state, Dec. 15, 2020.
On December 15, Guardsmen are transporting the first two boxes of vaccines to be distributed from one of five centralized hubs supporting 11 satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL6 / 9Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Spc. Martin Gamarra (far right) and Airman 1st Class Andreas Owen (center right) accompany medical professionals who will remove their allotment of COVID-19 vaccinations from their ultra-cold shipping container before resealing the container so the Guardsmen can continue their mission of delivering vaccines to sites across the state, Dec. 15, 2020.
Gamarra and Owen are part of a larger team of Guardsmen who are delivering vaccines from one of five centralized hubs supporting 11 satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL7 / 9Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Shane Edmonson, executive director of pharmacy services, unseals the first shipment of COVID-19 vaccines delivered by Oklahoma National Guardsmen at the Mercy Hospital in Northwest Oklahoma City, Dec. 15, 2020.
The vaccines were delivered by Spc. Martin Gamarra and Airman 1st Class Andreas Owens. Gamarra and Owen are part of a larger team of Guardsmen who are delivering vaccines from centralized hubs supporting multiple satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL8 / 9Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Spc. Martin Gamarra (left) and Airman 1st Class Andreas Owen (right) carry an ultra-cold container of COVID-19 vaccinations after making their first delivery at a hospital in Oklahoma City, Dec. 15, 2020.
Gamarra and Owen are part of a larger team of Guardsmen who are delivering vaccines from one of five centralized hubs supporting 11 satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL9 / 9Show Caption +Hide Caption –
Oklahoma National Guardsmen quickly move ulta-cold containers of COVID-19 vaccinations to vehicles the Guard members will use to transport the vaccines to sites across the state, Dec. 15, 2020.
These are the first two boxes of vaccines to be distributed from one of five centralized hubs supporting 11 satellite locations across Oklahoma. The Guardsmen will be using Oklahoma State Department of Health vehicles to transport the vaccines to the satellite locations with an escort from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
(Photo Credit: Sgt. Anthony Jones)VIEW ORIGINAL
OKLAHOMA CITY – The Oklahoma National Guard, in cooperation with the Oklahoma State Department of Health, delivered the first COVID-19 vaccines in the state on Dec. 15.
Two teams of Guardsmen collected the vaccines in Oklahoma City and transported them to health care professionals at satellite locations in Oklahoma City, Enid and Woodward.
"The Oklahoma National Guard is proud to have this opportunity to assist our fellow Oklahomans and help bring an end to the COVID-19 pandemic," said Maj. Gen. Michael Thompson, the adjutant general for Oklahoma.
The deliveries were the first of many for the Oklahoma National Guard, which has vaccine delivery missions scheduled through Dec. 17 – with more expected as Oklahoma receives additional shipments of vaccines.
To ensure the safest delivery of the vaccine to Oklahomans, only trained health care professionals will be unsealing the ultra-cold containers transported by Guard members to collect their allotments before resealing the containers and returning them to the National Guard couriers.
Spc. Martin Gamarra of Edmond, Oklahoma and a member of the Oklahoma Army National Guard's 90th Troop Command, and Airman 1st Class Andreas Owens, an Oklahoma City resident serving in the Oklahoma Air National Guard's 137th Special Operations Wing, were the first couriers to deliver vaccines to a hospital in Oklahoma City.
Gamarra, who has been assisting with the Oklahoma National Guard's COVID-19 response since spring, said health care providers at each stop were appreciative of the Guard for playing a part in getting the vaccine to Oklahomans.
"I signed up to help my community, and to be able to do it first-hand during the pandemic has been really rewarding for me," Gamarra said. "When I first signed up, I never thought I'd be working with other branches (of our state government), let alone the Health Department, and it's awesome to see first-hand how hard these nurses work every day with COVID, and seeing the vaccine is a light at the end of the tunnel."
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