Anonymous ID: 62b608 Sept. 1, 2022, 2:46 p.m. No.17478301   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The Military's own medical school teaches their student doctors to conceal safety information about the vaxx, like the fact that's it's not Approved, to coerce members to get vaxxed. This is criminal.

 

COVID Education Program Led By USU Graduates Yields Increased Vaccination Rates in Deployed Troops

August 31, 2021

 

Air Force Lt. Col. (Dr.) Jeanmarie Rey, a 2009 graduate of USU’s Hebert School of Medicine, participated in a benchmark plan to get military personnel vaccinated, which was so successful it became the largest vaccination effort in the United States Central Command’s area of operation.

 

Rey, a family physician, helped oversee an effort where more than 1,300 individuals were vaccinated in less than 48 hours, moving the acceptance rate for vaccinations from 39 to 62 percent with zero impact on combat operations. She credited the leadership and teamwork of the people she served for its success.

 

Now an assistant professor at USU, Rey served at Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates from

October 2020 to April 2021 as Chief of Medical Staff for the 380th Expeditionary Medical Group and 380th Air Expeditionary Wing.

 

According to Rey, the successful plan to vaccinate military personnel against COVID-19 came down to communication and by providing education, town hall-style meetings, and having frank discussions with Airmen, Soldiers, Sailors, and Marines.

 

She said what complicated matters was some weren’t initially confident in the vaccine. However, at the time of her deployment, two active duty service members on their base had become severely sick with COVID and the region surrounding them in the United Arab Emirates had become a hotbed for the virus. Those in contact with the infected are tracked down for quarantine, sometimes affecting as many as ten servicemembers for each person with COVID symptoms.

 

“That can bring down an entire operational unit, very quickly,” Rey said. It was going to become a race for education before the vaccine arrived.

 

Rey said an email was sent to commanders asking them to poll their people anonymously to avoid stigmatizing those that didn’t want the vaccine. She said it soon became clear that vaccination confidence rates varied greatly by unit. This allowed the medical group to estimate what the vaccine uptake rate would be and to target their educational interventions with more precision.

 

“I always talk about how, if you look at history, the things that have saved the most lives in medicine are access to clean water and vaccinations — by far.” - Air Force Lt. Col. Jeanmarie Rey

 

https://usupulse.blogspot.com/2021/08/covid-education-program-led-by-usu.html?m=1