06/30/2026 / By Willow Tohi

The U.S. military is racing against time to vaccinate new recruits with flu shots set to expire June 30, following a two-month halt on mandatory vaccinations and a growing outbreak that has sickened hundreds at a Texas Air Force base. The situation highlights ongoing tensions between vaccine mandates and personal medical choice, while raising questions about military readiness and the logistics of influenza prevention.
At Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, the sole Air Force basic training site, at least 275 recruits have contracted influenza this spring. Four have been hospitalized. One recruit, Keon McDaniel, died earlier this month after a medical emergency; officials have not determined whether influenza caused his death.
The current flu vaccine supply expires June 30, the end of the 2025-2026 vaccination cycle. Manufacturers typically switch production to the next season’s formula at this time, meaning new doses will not arrive until late August or September at the earliest, according to Toti Sanchez, former deputy chief at the armed forces health surveillance division of the U.S. Defense Health Agency.
“The manufacturing timeline is basically etched in stone,” Sanchez said.
Military leaders may request federal authorization to extend use of expired vaccines, but Sanchez called that outcome “unlikely.” Any remaining doses after the deadline would typically be discarded.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced in April that annual flu vaccinations would become voluntary for most service members, describing the change as an effort to expand personal medical choice. Vaccination rates among recruits subsequently dropped to about 40%, similar to the general population.
However, after the Lackland outbreak, Hegseth authorized military services to once again require flu shots for recruits and high-risk populations. The Army is also planning to mandate vaccines for overseas troops, first responders, healthcare personnel and soldiers in large-scale training exercises.
Basic training conditions create ideal environments for respiratory virus transmission, experts say. Recruits live in crowded dormitories, undergo intensive physical training under high stress with limited sleep, and come from diverse geographic regions—some from the Southern Hemisphere, where it is currently flu season.
Caitlin Rivers, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and former civilian epidemiologist for the Army, described boot camp as “famous for being conducive to outbreaks.” In her 2024 book Crisis Averted, she documented a recurring cycle of “panic and neglect” in military infectious disease policy, where leaders forgo vaccinations only to scramble when outbreaks occur.
About 700 new recruits arrive at Lackland every week. Once vaccines expire, officials will likely implement alternative infection control measures: splitting recruits into smaller groups for eating and showering, emphasizing hand hygiene and potentially using face masks, though masks are difficult to maintain during training.
The flu vaccine mandate for U.S. military personnel dates to 1945—81 years of continuous requirement before Hegseth’s April repeal. Sanchez expressed concern about “turning back the clock” on proven prevention measures.
Looking ahead, Sanchez noted that Moderna is poised to offer the first mRNA flu vaccine for people aged 50 and older. Such technology could eventually allow vaccine updates within one to two months instead of the current five to six months, potentially preventing situations like the current supply gap.
The Lackland outbreak and impending vaccine expiration underscore the practical consequences of military vaccination policy shifts. As officials weigh individual choice against collective readiness, the fundamental challenge remains: influenza spreads rapidly in close quarters, and prevention tools are only effective when available and administered. The coming weeks will test whether alternative infection control measures can contain the outbreak without the vaccine supply that has been a cornerstone of military health policy for more than eight decades. Natural remedies often work better, but military environments are not usually conducive to quarantine, hygiene, rest and superior nutrition.
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