An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | March 17, 2021

Oklahoma National Guard assists with COVID-19 vaccinations

By Sgt. Jordan Sivayavirojna Oklahoma National Guard

OKLAHOMA CITY – The Oklahoma National Guard is supporting Oklahoma’s whole-of-government response to COVID-19, shifting its mission and focus to serve the community better.

“We are still doing testing, contact tracing and vaccine delivery,” said Col. Robert Walter, the Joint Task Force commander for the Oklahoma National Guard. “Right now, we are focusing on administering the vaccine to the 11 health regions across the state, as well as the five separate shot teams we can send out to assist the Oklahoma State Department of Health.”

These Oklahoma National Guard’s vaccine strike teams assist OSDH. Each team includes five enlisted Guardsmen, three National Guard medics and one medical administrator and a nurse, who also serves as the team’s officer in charge. The teams operate small vaccine point of distribution sites (PODS) independently or augment larger health department PODS.

“Teams will be a support multiplier for OSDH to serve hotspots, specific populations and agencies,” said Col. Yolanda Murray, the Joint Task Force medical planner. “Teams can serve across the state to serve where and when needs arise without interrupting day-to-day operations at regional health districts.”

More than 150 Soldiers and Airmen are activated throughout the state for the COVID-19 mission.

“The regions are set up at all four corners of the state and everything in between,” Walter said. “We have at least 10 Guardsmen at the nine regions across Oklahoma and have two additional teams assisting the health department in Oklahoma County and Tulsa County.”

Some members of the Guard have been on this mission from the beginning. Spc. Eneisi Lopez, a medic with 160th Headquarters Battalion, 45th Field Artillery Brigade in Chandler, has worked on the pandemic response effort since March 2020.

“We are supposed to administer 2,400 vaccines today,” Lopez said during a vaccination event Feb. 25. “It helps the Oklahoma National Guard build a relationship with the community – that’s part of our job.”

The Oklahoma National Guard’s mission is not only overseas but within the communities where its members live. As the mission evolves, the Oklahoma National Guard remains flexible and ready to assist.

“I would anticipate the Guard participation will remain high for a while,” Walter said. “As more vaccines become available and the population that has been vaccinated grows, our need for vaccination teams will taper off and we will begin business as usual in the state.”

 

 

Related Articles
Oklahoma National Guard Airman 1st Class Jaquee Dixon, medical technician, 138th Fighter Wing, prepares COVID-19 vaccines at a community vaccination clinic in Tulsa April 21, 2021. The clinic runs from April 21 to June 15.
Oklahoma National Guard helps at federal vaccination clinic
By Maj. Kristin Tschetter, | April 29, 2021
TULSA, Okla. – Nearly 30 Oklahoma National Guardsmen are supporting a community vaccination clinic as part of the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.The Guard members are transporting vaccines, preparing them on-site...

Sgt. Lorelei Hubbard, an administrative noncommissioned officer assigned to the Oklahoma Army National Guard Recruiting and Retention Battalion, uses an artificial intelligence tool to rapidly determine award eligibility for a National Guard member at the Recruiting and Retention Battalion headquarters in Oklahoma City on June 17, 2026. The AI tool, developed by Staff Sgt. Herbert Hailey, improves the awards review process, saving hundreds of hours of manual review per Soldier, and could potentially save the Oklahoma Army National Guard more than 60,000 hours when applied across the force. Portions of this image have been blurred for OPSEC/PII purposes. Photo by Anthony Jones.
Oklahoma Guardsman Harnesses AI to Save Thousands of Hours of Work
By Staff Sgt. Anthony Jones, | June 17, 2026
OKLAHOMA CITY – A groundbreaking new artificial intelligence tool developed by an Oklahoma Army National Guard Soldier is set to transform the way the state processes military awards, potentially saving administrative staff...

Jane Horton poses next to Ty Dillon's No. 10 Chevrolet before the Coca-Cola 600 NASCAR race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in North Carolina, May 24, 2026. Dillon's race car carried the name of Horton's husband, Army Spc. Christopher David Horton, a sniper assigned to the Oklahoma Army National Guard's 45th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, who was killed Sept. 9, 2011, in Afghanistan. Courtesy photo.
National Guard Gold Star Spouse Turns Grief Into Advocacy
By Army Maj. Wes Shinego, | May 26, 2026
CONCORD, N.C. – The loudest place in American sports knew when to be quiet.At Charlotte Motor Speedway in North Carolina, the Coca-Cola 600 was everything it is supposed to be: horsepower, heat, noise and 600 miles of...