Customers in Tel Aviv line up to show their vaccine “green pass” before entering a concert on March 26, 2021. The digital apps are used to prove that holders have been vaccinated against COVID-19.
As a documentary filmmaker, Israeli Oren Rosenfeld has captured dozens of stories about the COVID-19 pandemic over the last year. But when the time came for him to get his vaccine in Tel Aviv, he missed getting a photo of the jab.
“The nurse was pretty quick,” he says. “I didn’t want to fake the selfie, so I waited for the second shot.”
When the second dose fully kicked in, Rosenfeld was granted access to the Green Pass, Israel’s vaccine certificate program, which allows inoculated citizens to enter places such as gyms, restaurants, music venues, and movie theaters. The pass can be either physical or in a smartphone app with a code that businesses can scan. A green check will appear if the holder of the Green Pass is vaccinated and allowed to enter.
Israel’s vaccine passport is the most developed program of its kind in the world, available for the 80 percent of the adult population that is fully vaccinated. The European Union is planning to launch the similar “Digital Green Certificate” this summer that will combine information on vaccination, COVID-19 test results, and recovery from the disease into one scannable QR code that allows residents to take flights and cross the borders of member countries.
As a documentary filmmaker, Israeli Oren Rosenfeld has captured dozens of
stories about the COVID-19 pandemic over the last year. But when the time came
for him to get his vaccine in Tel Aviv, he missed getting a photo of the jab.
“The nurse was pretty quick,” he says. “I didn’t want to fake the selfie, so I waited
for the second shot.”
When the second dose fully kicked in, Rosenfeld was granted access to the Green
Pass, Israel’s vaccine certificate program, which allows inoculated citizens to enter
places such as gyms, restaurants, music venues, and movie theaters. The pass
can be either physical or in a smartphone app with a code that businesses can
scan. A green check will appear if the holder of the Green Pass is vaccinated and
allowed to enter.
Israel’s vaccine passport is the most developed program of its kind in the world, available for the 80 percent of the adult population that is fully vaccinated. The European Union is planning to launch the similar “Digital Green Certificate” this summer that will combine information on vaccination, COVID-19 test results, and recovery from the disease into one scannable QR code that allows residents to take flights and cross the borders of member countries.
In the United States, the only way to verify your vaccination status is to flash the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) paper card that people get after their jabs.
The document includes medical information such as the vaccine type, the date of
the shot or shots, and where the vaccination happened (similar to the World Health
Organization yellow card).
A patient in Seattle receives a CDC vaccine record card in January 2021 after getting a COVID-19 vaccine. These cards and digital vaccine passports may be the keys to opening travel again.
But that paper might not be enough for people eager to jet off. In March, Iceland started to welcome vaccinated visitors, but the CDC vaccination cards weren’t enough to qualify at first (the country now accepts them). With reports surfacing of fake CDC cards being sold online, getting a version that can be trusted around the globe will be essential to opening up international travel for Americans.
What is a vaccine passport?
After a more than a year of lockdowns, vaccines are promising a way to see loved ones and travel again. Countries around the world are experimenting with ways to safely—or as safely as possible—open their economies and allow people to get out of their homes and hometowns. They’re looking to do this with vaccine passports that can prove someone’s coronavirus status.
The exact form these vaccine certificates will take remains to be seen, although there are dozens of digital app options in the works. But even a simple technology of a QR code on a piece of paper might function as a passport to opening the world up again.
A digital vaccine passport is a tool that connects someone’s immunization records to an app that can be presented at border crossings or airline check-in counters. The source of the data, how it is stored, and what is shown depends on the group or business providing the tool. Many are adding paper options with barcodes or QR codes to make sure people without mobile phones can use them.
Passports in development
Multiple groups are trying to build upon paper documents by digitizing vaccination data in ways they promise will be safe, equitable, and private. The Washington Post obtained a slide deck from the Biden administration that showed at least 17 different vaccine passport initiatives being developed around the country.
The challenge is daunting. For months, many destinations have required proof of a negative COVID-19 test before visitors are allowed to enter. But securing COVID-19 test results is currently easier than proving a vaccine status. This leaves travelers sharing pieces of paper or emails from labs, sometimes in languages foreign to those inspecting the data, in order to prove that they have met the criteria to enter a country. The lack of a standard format has led to confusion.
“The experience should be simple,” says Ramesh Raskar, an associate professor at MIT and founder of the PathCheck Foundation, a group of volunteers developing a vaccine passport. “It should be no more invasive and no more complicated than the CDC vaccine card.”
The PathCheck vaccine passport works by connecting certified vaccination records to a QR code that can be scanned by any facility or immigration office requiring such medical information. The data is stored in a way that can’t be tampered with and is available offline. The information can also be distributed in a paper form from the vaccine provider so that those with no or limited internet would be able to use it.
There is a clear need to standardize data across vaccine passport options so that they can be used globally and in many languages. Eric Piscini, the project lead on a vaccine passport project developed by IBM, points to how businesses can accept multiple types of credit cards (all with slightly different back end technology) using the same card reader as an example of how such standardization would work.
“You want to have a set of standards that everyone can rely on,” says Piscini. “You don’t want three different apps when you travel to three different countries.”
The IBM vaccine passport technology powers Excelsior Pass, New Yorkstate’s vaccine passport, which is currently being tested at some sports venues and arenas. New Yorkers taking part show an app with a special code that businesses can then scan with another app. That code stores information about the person’s vaccine status or a recent COVID-19 test result. A green check mark will pop up if the person is good to go (the Excelsior Pass is voluntary for now).
Another option in development is called CommonPass. It will help people prove their COVID-19 status and showcase the vital information on vaccinations no matter which standards are adopted across regions and languages, according to Paul Meyer, CEO of The Commons Project Foundation. Currently, Aruba uses it to ensure a negative COVID-19 test; Japan Airlines and Qantas airways are conducting trials of the CommonPass app.
Any vaccine passport should be designed from a public health angle and not a travel one, according to Meyer. “This is a health problem and a healthcare problem that we need to solve for,” he says. “If we do it right, then the travel world can be a beneficiary.”
Protecting privacy and fairness
With multiple digital vaccine passport options in development, the ACLU has warned that there is a possibility people’s civil liberties and privacy will be at risk. These concerns, and other political calculations, have led some states to ban the use of these passports. Florida and Texas have passed legislation making them illegal; other governors have said that they will not mandate any type of vaccine certificate to enter businesses.
Such concerns are cropping up in other countries too. Stephanie Hare, a technology researcher based in London, is deeply concerned about the British “COVID-status certification” program, which the government recently announced. The vaccine hasn’t been offered to everyone, so the program could punish those who would like it but haven’t gotten it yet. It doesn’t do anything for people gathering in private homes. Hare points to the COVID-19 tracking app that the United Kingdom released earlier in the pandemic, which failed to tell users that they had been exposed to the virus.
The question of how a vaccine passport would positively affect the pandemic—including how much or how quickly it would bring down the infection rate—is where investment should be made, according to Hare.
A passenger scans his digital health certificate before entering a train station in the Guizhou Province of China in January 2021. Several countries are developing health-tracking apps with QR codes—also known as vaccine passports—to check whether travelers have been inoculated against COVID-19.
“I would love a technology solution that solves this,” she says. “But I’m not convinced that it works. If vaccine passports aren’t going to bring down the [infection rate] number, why are we doing it? Let’s not create a fairy-tale tech solution.”
Regardless of how vaccine passports unfold in 2021, they need to be monitored and changed as we learn more about the disease, says Howard Koh, a professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Koh was the assistant secretary for health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under President Barack Obama. Koh was with the department when it ended the ban on HIV-positive foreigners entering the U.S. in 2010.
That policy started in 1987, when the disease wasn’t well understood, and it survived for years due to fear and bias. Koh spoke at the first AIDS conference held in the U.S. after the ban was lifted, something he says was a major honor that shaped how he thinks about vaccine passports, which could quickly turn into something that goes from opening up the world to shutting people out.
“We need to uphold the concepts of equity and fairness and not use this as a tool that can lead to discrimination,” he says.
Nonetheless, Koh says it’s impossible to set a goal for vaccine passports without understanding how effective they turn out to be once deployed. Until then, and until more is understood about the vaccines and variants, the future of vaccine passports could remain murky.
“Exactly how the passports will play into that is unclear,” says Koh. “We have to tread carefully.”
Source: here
The Global community could all do with a holiday after 16 months of Covid lockdown and fatigue. But how? Covid-19 is a highly transmissible pandemic disease with which the world has had to come to terms with and has found to its cost. COVID-19 has been responsible for almost 3 million documented deaths and almost 140 million infections. International travel will not fully return to ‘normal’ pre-Covid terms, probably for a number of years. What is clear, is the need for transparent indicators of traveller immunity which demonstrates that an individual does not pose a significant risk to the community the individual is visiting in another country. One also has to remember that being fully vaccinated does not confer an absent asymptomatic carriage of the coronavirus. While it is probably low, it has not yet been quantified, such that the risk to incoming populations is not assessable. The other issue to be factored in is that each country should reach the magical 70% herd immunity status in order to significantly reduce the person to person transmission rates. The only country in the World to have done so far during this pandemic is the United Kingdom, having surpassed this figure on Monday 12 April. There has been much discussion about the use of vaccine passports to eliminate quarantining either going to another country or returning to your home country or indeed country hopping if you are travelling for business or pleasure. It is hoped that as countries reach and surpass herd immunity levels, quarantine free travel bubbles or corridors can be created to eliminate quarantine restrictions. However, to achieve this, many challenging logistical legal and practical obstacles must be overcome. This National Geographic article explores some of these issues to define what is a vaccine passport; what will it look like; how will countries define reciprocity in vaccination programs; will each country accept a vaccine passport from a country which has used a lower efficacy vaccine (but has achieved the WHO standard of >50% efficacy); and how does this impact on moral, ethical, privacy and fairness concerns? I foresee that these dilemmas will and need to be solved before we can all return to ‘international normality’. While vaccine passport documentation may be interpreted as a coercive measure to incentivise vaccination, I refer the reader to the requirements of entry into some East African countries. You must have a valid Yellow Fever, government issued vaccination certification (or if you will, a vaccination passport), which is checked at the border immigration in order to allow the travelling individual to enter a particular country. The choice is simple. Either you obtain the vaccination if you wish to travel to East Africa or you refuse to be vaccinated, so you don’t travel. There is no coercion as it is an individual’s decision to determine acceptance of regulatory requirements. Hong Kong, with sufficient vaccine doses (even without the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine which is on hold), has sufficient capacity to vaccinate all Hong Kong residents but so far only about 8% of the population has been fully or partially vaccinated. While there are many reasons for vaccine hesitancy at play both in Hong Kong and in other countries, responsibility for vaccination lies squarely with governments and individual residents. I foresee that in the immediate future Covid-19 vaccination passports are to be a function of life. - Doctor Donald Greig
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