© Sharon Holland/Uniformed Services University More than 150 medical students from the Uniformed Services University's F. Edward Hebert School of Medicine class of 2020 will be graduating early to join the ranks of the military health system.

More than 9,000 retired soldiers have responded to the U.S. Army's call for retired medical personnel to assist with the response to the novel coronavirus pandemic, as hundreds of active duty soldiers deploy to support Army field hospitals in New York and Seattle.

Earlier this week, the Army sent a notification to more than 800,000 retired soldiers to gauge their willingness in returning to service in a volunteer capacity. In a Pentagon briefing on Thursday, Army Chief of Staff Gen. James McConville called the initial response "very, very positive."

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Army Surgeon General Scott Dingle told reporters that these volunteers will "fill those holes" in military medical treatment facilities across the nation where some staff are now deployed to field hospitals, leaving vacancies in their traditional assignments.

"What we'll do is even though we get many volunteers, we then will walk through the process of certification, making sure that all certifications and credentials are straight," Dingle said. "Then once we do that, we will plug them into all of our medical treatment facilities as required in support of the mission."

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© Lisa Ferdinando/Office of the Secretary of Defense Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. James C. McConville speaks at the Pentagon about the latest COVID-19 developments in the Army, March 26, 2020, in Washington.

The 531st Hospital Center out of Fort Campbell, Kentucky and the 9th Hospital Center out of Fort Hood, Texas -- roughly 650 personnel in total -- will arrive in New Jersey on Friday. They will be located at the Javits Center in New York City, which is being converted into a temporary hospital for non-coronavirus patients in order to take the pressure off city hospitals -- which are better equipped to treat infectious disease. The Javits Center is expected to be operational on Monday, McConville said.

The 627th Hospital Center from Fort Carson, Colorado will deploy to Seattle, where an advance team is coordinating with state and local authorities to determine where a temporary hospital could be established there. McConville said possible locations include CenturyLink Field -- home of the Seattle Seahawks -- and a state fairground.

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Three more active duty hospital units are on standby to possibly also deploy, Army officials said.

"This extraordinary challenge requires equally extraordinary solutions, and our retired Army healthcare professionals have shown that they are capable of providing the highest level of care while operating under constantly changing conditions," the Army said in a statement on Thursday. "This information request will no way interfere with any care they may be providing to their communities, is for future planning purposes only, and is completely voluntary."

But it's not just the Army that will lose medical personnel due to its response to the pandemic. More than a thousand Navy medical personnel have left their assignments for deployments aboard two Navy hospital ships that will dock in Los Angeles and New York City to take in non-coronavirus patients.

To assist with the shortfall in healthcare personnel, the federal government is making available more than 200 military medical students and graduate nursing students from the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences. The group, who are all active duty uniformed officers in the Army, Navy, Air Force, or Public Health Service, will have completed all of their requirements and graduate early to backfill their colleagues who are responding to the coronavirus.

© Uniformed Services University Air Force Capt. Nicholas Robertson, a dual-track family and women's health nurse practitioner student in USU's Graduate School of Nursing, will be among those students graduating early to help support the military health system mission.

"Our curriculum has a specific focus on threats like emerging infectious diseases and disasters that our military and Public Health Service forces are likely to encounter in the course of their careers," said university president Dr. Richard Thomas. "This instruction is based on real-life lessons learned, is woven throughout the curriculum and incorporated into our medical field exercises."

He added, "Our students are uniquely prepared to meet and address the readiness needs of the Department of Defense and our Nation the moment they step out of our doors. This is exactly what they were educated and trained to do."

The Army is specifically interested in recruiting retired critical care officers, anesthesiologists, nurse anesthetists, critical care nurses, nurse practitioners, nurses, respiratory specialists, and medics, according to the statement.

Interested retired career medical personnel should contact usarmy.knox.hrc.mbx.g3-retiree-recall@mail.mil or call 502-613-4911.

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