About 100 U.S. athletes at the Tokyo Olympics are unvaccinated, medical chief says

83% of U.S. athletes at the Tokyo Olympics have been vaccinated, much higher than the national rate in the United States.

Dr. Jonathan Finnoff, Chief Medical Officer at the United Sates Olympic and Paralympic Committee.

Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images

Referenced Symbols

The Tokyo Olympics have officially begun in Japan despite spiking cases of COVID-19 in several countries.

Athletes from all over the world, including the United States, have left to compete for medals in Tokyo, and many of them were vaccinated prior to their departure.

According to Dr. Jonathan Finnoff, team doctor for the United States, 83% of U.S. athletes in Tokyo have been immunized with shots developed by Pfizer PFE, +0.51%  with German partner BioNTech BNTX, +0.35%, Moderna MRNA, +7.84%,   or Johnson & Johnson JNJ, +1.06%.

“Eighty-three percent is actually a substantial number and we’re quite happy with it,” Finnoff, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee’s medical chief, said about his group’s vaccination rate.

This would mean that roughly 100 of the 613 American athletes in Tokyo have not been vaccinated.

The 83% vaccination rate for U.S. Olympic athletes is much higher than the national vaccine rate in the United States of 59.7% for adults ages 18 and over, according to the CDC vaccination tracker.

The Tokyo Olympics opening ceremonies have begun and can be watched exclusively on NBC.

Read Next

Read Next

Democrats lash out at McConnell, who says GOP won’t support raising debt limit

Senate Democrats accused Republicans Wednesday of a “shameless, cynical” ploy that would damage the economy and the government's credit rating after the chamber's GOP leader said his party would vote against raising the federal debt limit.

More On MarketWatch

About the Author