Eurasia interested in QR health code
▶ Technical committee set up to push China- proposed mutual recognition
Eurasian countries have shown great interest in an international digital health code mutual recognition mechanism proposed by China to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, said representatives from various medical associations.
“Countries like Russia, Kazakhstan and Armenia have expressed a lot of interest in introducing such a mechanism to push forward global cooperation on the COVID- 19 QR code from medical and information technology perspectives,” Ge
Jian, chairman of the General Council of the Eurasian Economic Cooperation Organization ( EECO), told the Global Times during a seminar held in Foshan, South China’s Guangdong Province on Monday.
The seminar was held to discuss the international mutual recognition mechanism of health code, which aims to speed up cross- border personnel exchanges by recognizing a person’s health status via a QR code that China established months ago to combat virus.
Ge said the QR code would act as a “digital passport” and may become a necessary step to revive cross- border personnel exchanges and the resumption of work in the post- COVID era, especially between countries establishing “green channels” or “fast lanes.” He emphasized the significance of such a mechanism, as travel bans and restrictions have greatly hindered the global economic recovery.
“We are interested in China’s experience. China has put the QR health code system into use in more than 100 cities… A QR code that shows a person’s health status would greatly ease the burden of medical staff and the whole medical care system,” Aizhan Sadykova, president of the Eurasian Medical Association and Kazakhstan Medical Association, said in a virtual speech at the seminar.
“The mechanism would be based on four principles: safeguarding the information security of the countries involved, guaranteeing user privacy, standardizing code recognition, and providing efficiency and convenience,” Zhang Chao, president of Beijing- based Zhongguancun Industry & Information Research Institute of Two- dimensional Code Technology ( ZIIOT), told the Global Times at the seminar, suggesting each country should manage the data of its own citizens.
During Monday’s seminar, a technical committee was jointly launched by the ZIIOT and the EECO, with the participation of more than 11 organizations and medical associations from Germany, Russia, Mongolia, Uzbekistan, Bulgaria, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, a hospital in Kyrgyzstan, and the Eurasian Medical Association.
Zhang said such a mechanism could have a long- term function. “Whenever a virus crops up, the mechanism would help humans to respond quickly.”