Dr. Robert Redfield, former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has joined Gov. Larry Hogan's office as a senior adviser for public health, Hogan announced Tuesday.

Redfield "will advise us on a wide range of immediate priorities," Hogan said.

The position is unpaid, the governor's office said.

Former President Donald Trump appointed Redfield to lead the CDC in 2018. Tuesday's news is a bit of a homecoming for Redfield. After years as a U.S. Army physician, Redfield retired from the service in 1996 to co-found the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Redfield congratulated Hogan on a successful response to COVID-19 and hailed the "very impressive" mass-vaccination site at M&T Bank Stadium, which he visited Monday.

"I want to encourage Marylanders and all Americans to embrace the vaccine with confidence and not leave it on the shelf," Redfield said.

Redfield was asked whether he stands by the CDC's performance during the pandemic.

"I would just echo that I continue to be proud of the CDC and the men and women there," Redfield said. "I think it remains the premier public health agency in the world. We generated literally thousands of pages of recommendations to the American public."

Join BJL on WhatsApp Status: Click here to Join BJL status for engagements, births, deals, levayos, events & more

Join BJL on WhatsApp Groups: Click here to Join an official BJL WhatsApp group for breaking news as it happens

However, he said he regretted the "inconsistency of messaging" and said, without naming names, that it is important to have public health messaging "echoed by civic leaders."

Trump and other top Republicans made a number of false claims about the virus and were often seen in public without face masks.

Hogan said key coronavirus metrics continue to improve. He called the arrival of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine a "literal shot in the arm" for vaccination efforts. However, he said the nearly 50,000 doses received this week will be the only doses Maryland will receive for a while. Hogan relayed word from federal officials that the government emptied its stockpile of the vaccine and that more doses will not be available until around two weeks from now.

"I can assure you that whatever supply we are able to receive, we are ready to deploy and get out to Marylanders," Hogan said. Read more at WBAL