Vincenzo Betulia, one of Gulfshore Life magazine’s Men of the Year, makes the restaurant business look easy in the kitchen and out of it, even during a pandemic. But the pressure couldn’t be more intense.

“There is no option for me to fail,” Betulia said. “We have 230 employees and they’re part of my family. It is stressful, because without me being open, how can they put food on their tables?”

That’s why the owner of three Naples restaurants got creative. During the shutdown, he turned The French into a grocery store and takeout. When they reopened, he rented the parking lot next to Bar Tulia for outdoor dining. But Betulia and his business partners realized a sacrifice still had to be made to help their workers.

“We decided to pay for their health insurance,” Betulia said. “I knew they weren’t going to be able to make any money.”

Betulia credits the community for helping his restaurant make it through.

“We were having people come in that were ordering $137 for a two-person dinner with a bottle of wine, and they would leave a $1,000 tip,” Betulia said.

He doesn’t take such gestures lightly, especially when he thinks of friends in the restaurant business in other areas.

“I have friends that are in New York that are losing their restaurants,” Betulia said. “I have friends in San Francisco that are chefs that haven’t worked in 10 months.”

A chef, the son of two immigrants, fighting to achieve the American Dream with or without a pandemic. Betulia still plans on opening a fourth restaurant in Mercato in the spring of 2021.

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It’s been three years since Hurricane Irma hit Southwest Florida, and some people who were in the region during the storm are still recovering from it. A local organization decided to step up for the holidays to help a woman with a damaged home.

Pam Michel on Marco Island is ready for Christmas, and this year she’s getting a $10,000 gift from the Marco Patriots.

“They’re being wonderful and so close to Christmas,” Michel said. “I’m sure they’ve got other stuff to do.”

Marco Patriots are also building Michel a new pool deck for free, so she can get her screened-in patio back.

“I have not been outside in the back in a couple years,” Michel explained.

Her old one was destroyed during Irma.

“Horrid. I mean, I can look out, but you can’t just go there, and I really like to go out. I like to sit,” Michel said.

Matt Melican with Marco Patriots said the decision to help Michel was made almost immediately after learning about her situation.

“It happened a matter of seconds,” Melican said. “Everybody just said, ‘Well, wait a minute. This is how we can do this.’”

Melican knew the Marco Patriots had to help.

“So to help people reach their unmet needs and overcome adversity in the ways that we can do it,” Melican said. “We’re there to do it.”

Volunteers showed up to Michel’s home to work hard to get the patio done before Christmas Day, and she can’t wait.

“I’ll be out there every second I can now, so that’ll be great,” Michel said. “And I’m really grateful for them for doing this. It was totally unexpected.”

Marco Patriots members say they’re happy to do anything to help their community get back to normal, helping people such as Michel put Hurricane Irma behind her.

“I hope so, and I don’t want to see Irma’s cousin come either,” Michel said.

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Mary Bousquet has never been busier.

She’s been a volunteer at the Cape Coral Caring Center for over a year.

“Just in the holiday season here we’re getting so many more customers than we were before because there’s just so much need in the community,” Bousquet said.

Every month, Bousquet said, she sees new faces lining up to receive food. This year, the need for food has nearly doubled at the Cape Coral Caring Center.

The center held a drive-thru distribution on Tuesday and many cars showed up.

Bousquet, who was a single mom for years, said she knows how difficult it can be to make ends meet.

“I was fortunate to have a job and I was fortunate to have a very supportive family but I know that it can be hard especially when you are single, raising children,” she said.

“It’s very disheartening to know that there’s (sic) so many people in need especially when they come in and they have their children in the car,” Bousquet said.

According to the center, they used to help about three to five families a day, but now instead it’s gone up to almost 50 to 70 families every day.

“A lot of people called on the phone and they would say I just lost my job and I don’t know what I’m supposed to do, how am I going to feed my family,” said Julie Ferguson, executive director of the Cape Coral Caring Center. “It was so nice to be able to tell them you know what, pull your car up and we’re gonna put some nice food in your car.”

Volunteers from the Rotary Club helped the center with the drive-thru on Tuesday.

“It stays local,” said Suzanne Vasbinder, assistant governor for Area 4 Rotary. “We know we are servicing the people in Cape Coral and that’s special, honestly.”

Ferguson said helping other’s puts a smile on her face.

“To be able to help people and to be the answer to somebody’s prayer that just, just touches my heart, makes me feel good,” Ferguson said.

The Caring Center will hold another food distribution tomorrow from 9:30 am to noon. You must be a Cape Coral resident and bring your I.D. to participate.

If you’d like to help the Cape Coral Caring Center, go to their website.

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Veterans sacrifice so much for our country but are often forgotten. This holiday season, Marines in Southwest Florida made it a point to not only remember, but help them.

Two Marines came bearing gifts to Army veteran Susan Rogers. “I was surprised and I thought that’s fricking cool,” Rogers said.

Rogers lives at the Punta Gorda Veterans Village, along with 22 other veterans. Every single one of them got gifts. But, each of them still have one Christmas wish – to find a permanent home.

“When you’re in a position like this you feel like your invisible and you feel like a nobody you feel like a failure you feel like a loser and we’re not,” Rogers said.

Joy Pasquariello spent four years in the Navy. On Tuesday, she felt appreciated. “Homeless vets are definitely forgotten. They don’t know what we go through every day,” said Pasquariello. “Between getting food stamps the whole process here it’s like they.. they don’t think we exist but we do exist.”

The Collins family from Charlotte County along with Volunteers of America and other community sponsors joined forces to help these homeless veterans out.

Marine Private First Class Zane Collins is home for the holidays awaiting his orders. Collins said he feels a kinship with these soldiers. “It made me feel good knowing that I can help people I can, that helped keep us free before I can do it,” Collins said.

Rogers says the gifts are perfect! “These gifts are perfect because they’re going to help us keep going forward you know we don’t need the little game set no we need stuff that’s going to help us,” she said.

The mission of Volunteers of America of Florida is to create positive life-changes through affordable housing.

Volunteers of America works not only with homeless veterans but with families and seniors as well.

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There are scammers continuing to use the concerns for the pandemic as a way to take advantage of others.

Scammers are using “smishing” — messages to sent to personal cell phones — to cause fear and then steal from the person who received it.

You might have heard about phishing attacks, which are emails with unknown links. “Smishing” is when dangerous links in messages are sent via SMS or text message.

The goal is to get your personal information and to steal your identity.

By accessing your device, scammers could collect any stored information as well.

A message might say say someone who you came in contact with has the coronavirus or is showing symptoms.

No one wants to see a message like that, and that text isn’t from a contact tracer. Instead, it’s likely someone out to steal your identity and money.

“Smishing” is a new twist on a scam that’s playing off the public’s fears over COVID-19 and potential exposure to it.

Messages will go on to recommend you isolate and get tested.

Here’s the “gotcha”: There is a link for more information, but that link could lead to trouble, says Alex Pham, a cybersecurity expert.

“There are many risks, one risk being that, if you press a bad link, you could potentially download malware, viruses, worms that could leave back doors open for hackers and take your information for harmful purposes,” Pham said.

Remember to:

  • Check message origination
  • Don’t click on unknown links
  • Don’t give personal or financial information
  • Don’t panic
  • Check government sources such as the county or state health departments for accurate information, and protect your personal information.

MORE:

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Red tide is on Southwest Florida’s coast.

Some dead fish have been found on Naples’s shores. And in Lee County, the Department of Health has alerted the public about blooms near South Seas Plantation Beach Access on Captiva Island, Lighthouse Beach Park and Tarpon Bay Road Beach on Sanibel, Lynn Hall Park on Fort Myers Beach, and Lovers Key State Park.

How is the restaurant industry dealing with the double whammy of red tide and COVID-19?

Surprisingly enough for Ocean Prime – a restaurant a few blocks away from Naples Beach — business has been steady.

Rick Giannasi, Ocean Prime’s general manager, said the red tide is lingering a bit, but it’s not as bad as it has been in the past.

“It’s kind of spotty,” Giannasi said. “We did maybe have a couple of guests last night that were maybe hesitant about coming out, so we had a couple of cancellations, but no one was really talking about it that much. I’ve heard a little bit, like, ‘Yeah I have a little tickle in my throat, a little cough.”

Dr. Mike Parsons, a marine science professor at the Water School at FGCU, said there are several ideas about what can end a bloom.

In this case, researchers are waiting to see how cold weather can affect red tide with the recent drop in temperatures.

“One thing that’s come up a bit, especially this time of year and the fact that we’ve had some cold fronts coming through, is how does red tide respond to colder waters, and basically we’re in the sweet spot for its temperature right now,” Parsons said.

Regardless, Giannasi said, his restaurant is holding its own.

“Everyone’s still being cautious around here, but they’re still coming out and we’re doing some good distancing in the restaurant and keeping people as safe as possible, but it’s been pretty good.”

To check on current red tide conditions, go to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for their daily update.

If you would like to report a fish kill, you can do so by visiting the FWC’s Fish Kill Hotline

MORE: DOH-Lee issues health alert for red tide along Lee County coast

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The Justice Department is suing Walmart, alleging the company unlawfully dispensed controlled substances through its pharmacies, helping to fuel the opioid crisis in America.

The civil complaint being filed Tuesday points to the role Walmart’s pharmacies may have played in the crisis by filling opioid prescriptions and by unlawfully distributing controlled substances to the pharmacies during the height of the opioid crisis. Walmart operates more than 5,000 pharmacies in its stores around the country.

The Justice Department alleges Walmart violated federal law by selling thousands of prescriptions for controlled substances that its pharmacists “knew were invalid,” said Jeffrey Clark, the acting assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s civil division.

Federal law required Walmart to spot suspicious orders for controlled substances and report those to the Drug Enforcement Administration, but prosecutors charge the company didn’t do that. Walmart couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

“Walmart knew that its distribution centers were using an inadequate system for detecting and reporting suspicious orders,” said Jason Dunn, the U.S. attorney in Colorado. “As a result of this inadequate system, for years Walmart reported virtually no suspicious orders at all. In other words, Walmart’s pharmacies ordered opioids in a way that went essentially unmonitored and unregulated.”

The suit alleges that Walmart made it difficult for its pharmacists to follow the rules, putting “enormous pressure” on them to fill a high volume of prescriptions as fast as possible, while at the same time denying them the authority to categorically refuse to fill prescriptions issued by prescribers the pharmacists knew were continually issuing invalid prescriptions.

AP reported the news of the lawsuit ahead of the Justice Department’s public announcement, citing a person who could not discuss the matter publicly before the announced move. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity.

The Justice Department’s lawsuit comes nearly two months after Walmart filed its own preemptive suit against the Justice Department, Attorney General William Barr and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

In its lawsuit, Walmart said the Justice Department’s investigation — launched in 2016 — had identified hundreds of doctors who wrote problematic prescriptions that Walmart’s pharmacists should not have filled. But the lawsuit charged that nearly 70% of the doctors still have active registrations with the DEA.

Walmart’s lawsuit alleged the government was blaming it for the lack of regulatory and enforcement policies to stem the crisis. The company is asking a federal judge to declare the suit has no basis to seek civil damages. That suit remains ongoing.

The initial investigation was the subject of a ProPublica story published in March. ProPublica reported that Joe Brown, then U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Texas office, spent years pursuing a criminal case against Walmart for its opioid prescription practices, only to have it stymied after the retail giant’s lawyers appealed to senior officials in the Justice Department.

Two months later, Brown resigned. He didn’t give a reason for his departure except to say he would be “pursuing opportunities in the private and public sectors.” Brown went into private practice in the Dallas area.

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As shoppers finish their holiday shopping this year, there might be an item or two that needs to be returned.

Different stores have differing return policies.

Walmart has announced a new option for returns — a partnership between the retail giant and FedEx will allow customers to get their items picked up, according to CNN. The new service is called “Carrier Pickup by FedEx” and can be accessed via Walmart’s website and app.

MORE: ‘Tis the Season for Hassle-Free Returns

You can schedule when you want your order picked up, or drop it off at a FedEx location.

Walmart will allow most electronics purchased between Oct. 16 and Christmas Day to be returned by Jan. 24. Items also have a 90-day window from the delivery to be returned.

MORE: Walmart’s return policy

Target accepts returns at their stores or through the mail. Their deadline to return electronics purchased between Oct. 1 and Christmas Day is Jan. 25. Items received via mail have a 90-day return period.

MORE: Target’s return policy

At Best Buy, most of their returns need to be back by Jan. 16, including in-store returns and shipping using a prepaid UPS label.

Amazon will allow items shipped between Oct. 1 and New Year’s Eve to be returned by Jan. 31. Double-check whether your item is sold by a third-party seller because the same rules might not apply. Amazon returns can be dropped off without a box or label at Kohls and UPS stores.

If you’re missing a gift receipt, you might be at the store’s mercy. In most cases, you may be given store credit.

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Federal health officials say clinical trials show that both coronavirus vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna are safe and more than 90% effective at preventing coronavirus infections.

That hasn’t stopped groups from portraying the vaccines as dangerous, the product of corruption, or part of a government plot to track citizens. We have fact-checked unproven or innaccurate claims that say the coronavirus vaccines can cause death and infertility; that all Americans will be forced to get vaccinated; that the vaccines are part of a larger plan to implant people with microchips.

Such claims seek to undermine Americans’ confidence in coronavirus vaccines — with consequences for the future course of the pandemic, medical experts say.

“The whole point of a vaccine campaign is to achieve herd immunity safely, and that only happens when a significant portion of the population is inoculated,” said Dr. Seema Yasmin, director of research and education programs at the Stanford Health Communication Initiative. “And that won’t happen when there are large swaths of the community where there’s distrust in vaccines.”

Many unproven or innaccurate claims about the coronavirus vaccine have circulated in online communities skeptical of mainstream medical interventions or the power of the federal government. Some have spread misinformation about COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic.

“I think our second wave of the infodemic is really going to be focused on the vaccines,” said Sarah Evanega, director of the Cornell Alliance for Science.

Alternative health websites and Facebook pages are among the largest sources of falsehoods about the coronavirus vaccine, according to NewsGuard, a firm that tracks online misinformation. A report from the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a London nonprofit organization, found that accounts it describes as anti-vaccine on social media have gained nearly 8 million followers since 2019 — outpacing the growth of what it calls pro-vaccination groups.

Amid the spread of inaccurate information, social media platforms have started to take action.

On Oct. 14, YouTube said it would remove videos that contain claims about COVID-19 vaccines that contradict information from public health authorities. On Dec. 3, Facebook made a similar announcement, followed by Twitter on Dec. 16.

In response to those restrictions, activists have pivoted to hosting in-person events across the country, with the hope that news outlets will report on their claims, NBC News reported.

Some people may be susceptible to unproven claims about vaccines because unanswered questions about who should take it remain.

“Parents spend a lot of energy evaluating the risks and benefits of vaccines, and they are inclined to overestimate the risk and underestimate the benefit,” said Jennifer Reich, a sociology professor at the University of Colorado-Denver who has studied vaccine hesitancy.

While the coronavirus vaccines were developed in record time, the underlying research behind them goes back decades. Tens of thousands of people participated in clinical trials this year to make sure the vaccines were safe before rolling them out to the general public. To receive FDA emergency-use authorizations, the manufacturers had to follow up with at least half of participants for at least two months after receiving their vaccinations.

Vice President Mike Pence receives a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine shot at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex Dec. 18, 2020, in Washington. (AP)

Still, another worry is that some people assume the government rushed the vaccines before they were ready. Mixed signals earlier in the pandemic may have contributed to that impression.

In April, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed course after initially advising healthy Americans to not wear face masks in public. In July, the FDA revoked its emergency-use authorization for hydroxychloroquine, a drug used to treat rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, saying it’s “unlikely to be effective in treating COVID-19” and could cause “serious side effects.”

“So you can see how that would rattle people who are on the sidelines saying that, ‘You’re the agency that regulates vaccines. You rushed and then revoked the EUA for hydroxychloroquine … are you rushing this?’” Yasmin said.

Since May, at least seven polls have taken stock of how Americans feel about getting vaccinated for COVID-19. Confidence in the vaccine dipped over the summer, and most polls show that between 50-70% of respondents are now willing to take a vaccine. Scientists estimate that 60-70% of people need to get vaccinated in order to achieve herd immunity. They are hopeful vaccine education efforts will help.

Black and Hispanic Americans are significantly less likely to say they would get the vaccine, possibly because of the historical exploitation of minorities by the scientific community. Some anti-vaccine misinformation has specifically targeted minorities. Since rates of illness and death from COVID-19 have been higher for minorities than for white Americans, the consequences of forgoing vaccination could be especially dire.

To build trust, President-elect Joe Biden received his vaccine on camera on Dec. 21. Vice President Mike Pence received his first shot during a televised event at the White House on Dec. 18. Three ex-presidents — Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama — have said they would get vaccinated on camera, too.

The vaccination examples may change some minds. But for some people, the decision transcends politics and speaks to closely held beliefs about the pharmaceutical industry and government surveillance.

“If somebody has adopted something because it’s an expression of deeper identity, then good luck,” said Joseph Uscinski, a University of Miami associate professor of political science who researches conspiracy theories. “You may not change their minds with a link or a fact-check, and even if you did, you’re engaged in a game of Whac-a-Mole.”

To reduce the impact of misinformation, Reich said public health officials need to be clear about what the vaccine will and won’t do, and how it will affect the rest of the pandemic.

“My No. 1 priority is not just to make sure people take the vaccine — it’s to make sure people feel good about taking the vaccine so we can maintain public health consensus moving forward,” she said.

Editor’s note: This story was updated shortly after publication to note Biden received a vaccine on Dec. 21.

PolitiFact Sources:

Associated Press, “Twitter to start removing COVID-19 vaccine misinformation,” Dec. 16, 2020Canadian Medical Association Journal, “Facts not enough to change minds about health myths,” Nov. 20, 2017

Center for Countering Digital Hate, “The Anti-Vaxx Industry: How Big Tech powers and profits from vaccine misinformation

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Public Health Service Syphilis Study at Tuskegee

CNN, “Expect a quicker authorization of Moderna’s coronavirus vaccine,” Dec. 16, 2020

COVID Tracking Project, accessed Dec. 17, 2020

Food and Drug Administration, “Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA Revokes Emergency Use Authorization for Chloroquine and Hydroxychloroquine,” June 15, 2020

Food and Drug Administration, “FDA Briefing Document: Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine,” Dec. 10, 2020

Food and Drug Administration, “FDA Briefing Document: Moderna COVID-19 Vaccine,” Dec. 17, 2020

Food and Drug Administration, “FDA Takes Key Action in Fight Against COVID-19 By Issuing Emergency Use Authorization for First COVID-19 Vaccine,” Dec. 11, 2020

Harriet Washington, “Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present

Interview with Jennifer Reich, a sociology professor at the University of Colorado-Denver who has studied vaccine hesitancy, Dec. 17, 2020

Interview with Joseph Uscinski, a University of Miami associate professor of political science who researches conspiracy theories

Interview with Sarah Evanega, director of the Cornell Alliance for Science, Dec. 4, 2020

Interview with Dr. Seema Yasmin, director of research and education programs at the Stanford Health Communication Initiative, Dec. 8, 2020

Nature, “The online competition between pro- and anti-vaccination views,” May 13, 2020

NBC News, “Anti-vaccination groups target local media after social media crackdowns,” Dec. 17, 2020

NBC News, “Letter targets minorities on Long Island with coronavirus vaccine misinformation, state senator says,” Sept. 15, 2020

NewsGuard, “Misinformation about development of a COVID-19 vaccine spreads widely on Facebook,” Nov. 30, 2020

NPR, “As Pandemic Deaths Add Up, Racial Disparities Persist — And In Some Cases Worsen,” Sept. 23, 2020

NPR, “‘I Didn’t Feel A Thing:’ Pence Gets Coronavirus Vaccine In Public Event,” Dec. 18, 2020

PolitiFact, “Biden did not ‘confirm’ or support an agenda to microchip Americans,” Dec. 11, 2020

PolitiFact, “CDC director says healthy people should wear masks,” Sept. 18, 2020

PolitiFact, “Fact-checking hoaxes and conspiracies about the coronavirus,” Jan. 24, 2020

PolitiFact, “Health misinformation site promotes conspiracy about coronavirus,” Feb. 10, 2020

PolitiFact, “Many Americans say they don’t want a vaccine. Should we be worried?” Dec. 8, 2020

PolitiFact, “No, chip on COVID-19 vaccine syringes would not be injected or track people,” Dec. 15, 2020

PolitiFact, “8 facts and 4 unknowns about the coronavirus vaccines,” Dec. 17, 2020

Quartz, “How many people need to be vaccinated for life to go back to normal?” Dec. 4, 2020

Reuters, “Former U.S. Presidents Obama, Bush, Clinton willing to take coronavirus vaccine on camera,” Dec. 3, 2020

Reuters, “YouTube bans coronavirus vaccine misinformation,” Oct. 14, 2020

Tweet, Dec. 14, 2020

The Wall Street Journal, “Biden to Get Covid-19 Vaccine in Public Next Week, Pence on Friday,” Dec. 16, 2020

The Washington Post, “Anti-vaccination leaders fuel black mistrust of medical establishment as covid-19 kills people of color,” July 17, 2020

The Washington Post, “Facebook steps up campaign to ban false information about coronavirus vaccines,” Dec. 3, 2020

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Bay Pines VA Healthcare System vaccinated the first Veteran patient today shortly after the VA’s announcement of additional Pfizer vaccine shipments to VA facilities.

Navy Veteran William German, 95, and resident of the Community Living Center (CLC) on the Bay Pines campus was among the first VA patients to receive the vaccine. Shortly thereafter, more than six Veteran CLC residents received their vaccine.

“Bay Pines VA Healthcare System team is eager to continue vaccinating our healthcare personnel and our Veterans living in our Community Living Center” said Paul Russo, Director and CEO of the Bay Pines VA Healthcare System. “As vaccine supplies increase, we will be offering COVID-19 vaccination to all Veterans and employees who want to be vaccinated.”

Bay Pines VA Healthcare System was one of fifteen additional VA facilities that received an allocation of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine the week of December 21. Bay Pines VA Healthcare System is also one of 113 VA Medical Centers across the country to receive the first limited supply of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine. Sites were identified based on need for the vaccine according to CDC’s 1A prioritization and capacity to store the vaccine at -20◦C.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration stated that in clinical trials the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine was 95% effective in preventing COVID-19 disease. The vaccine is administered as a series of 2 doses, 21 days apart. The side effects for both appear similar to those of other vaccines and are short-lived. The Moderna COVID-19 vaccine was 94 percent effective in clinical trials in preventing COVID-19 disease. The vaccine is administered in two doses, 28 days apart. The side effects appear similar to those of other vaccines and are short-lived.

Even after receiving COVID-19 vaccination, employees and Veterans should continue wearing face coverings, practicing physical distancing and washing hands often.

As vaccines become available for more groups of Veterans, Bay Pines VA Healthcare System staff members will reach out to eligible Veterans to schedule vaccinations. There is no need to preregister or come to a facility to sign up.

Veterans can get up-to-date information on VA’s VA COVID-19 vaccine webpage, which launched on December 11, 2020, and sign up to receive regular updates on the vaccine on the VA’s Stay Informed page.

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