Global Times

Eurasia interested in QR health code

▶ Technical committee set up to push China- proposed mutual recognitio­n

- By Zhang Dan in Foshan

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.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China