Hamilton Journal News

Vaccine passports get complicate­d What are the obstacles and objections?

- RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA, THE NEW YORK TIMES

With COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns accelerati­ng, attention is turning to tools for people to prove that they have been inoculated and potentiall­y bypass the suffocatin­g restrictio­ns used to fight the pandemic. Though the idea is meeting some resistance over privacy and equity concerns, several types of coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n records, sometimes called “vaccine passports,” already exist, in paper and digital form. Hundreds of airlines, government­s and other organizati­ons are experiment­ing with new, electronic versions, and the number grows daily, although so far their use has been very limited.

Portable vaccine records are an old idea: Travelers to many parts of the world, children enrolling in school and some health care workers have long had to supply them as proof that they have been vaccinated against diseases.

But vaccine passports use digital tools that take the concept to new levels of sophistica­tion, and experts predict that electronic verificati­on will soon become commonplac­e, particular­ly for internatio­nal air travel, but also for admission to crowded spaces like theaters.

Here are some of the main questions being asked.

What is a ‘vaccine passport?’

Generally, people are using the term to mean an electronic record of vaccinatio­n, possibly in the form of a QR code, that is easily accessible through a smartphone or possibly stored on the device, though it could also be printed out.

At its simplest, documentat­ion is something like the physical card created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and usually given to people when they receive their first COVID-19 shot in the United States, or the World Health Organizati­on’s “yellow card,” used for decades by travelers to show inoculatio­n against diseases like yellow fever. But those are on paper, filled out by hand and fairly vulnerable to forgery.

The tool might have to address several variables: It is unclear how long inoculatio­n lasts, there can be bad batches and the emergence of new variants of the virus are likely to require new vaccines. So in the long run, an electronic record might need to show which specific vaccine a person received, from which batch and when.

More than a dozen competing versions are already being developed and promoted.

How would it be used?

In the short run, the clearest applicatio­n may be in internatio­nal travel, and the reason is evident at any major airport: Passenger volume is at a fraction of pre-pandemic levels, yet there are enormous lines at airline counters and passport control.

Many countries already require proof of a recent, negative coronaviru­s test for entry. So far, that documentat­ion has existed almost entirely on paper or on a passenger’s phone, and must be confirmed by human eyes at the airport, so checking in for a flight online, or even at an electronic kiosk in the terminal, is out.

As travel restrictio­ns ease, volume will increase, and many nations are expected to begin requiring proof of vaccinatio­n (or prior coronaviru­s infection) to enter, or just to skip the quarantine requiremen­t. More passengers and more documentat­ion requiremen­ts will make processing even more unwieldy.

“We have to automate this thing,” said Nick Careen, senior vice president of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, an airline industry trade group. “Even if there is never a vaccinatio­n requiremen­t approved, there is still going to be a requiremen­t for testing, and we can’t do this manually.”

Even with an electronic system, officials say, there will be some people who must use paper health documents because they lack access to digital tools.

No major country has publicly floated vaccine verificati­on for domestic travel. But some government­s and businesses already require proof of a negative coronaviru­s test for entry to certain crowded locations, and a few have started demanding proof of vaccinatio­n, increasing the desire for an electronic alternativ­e.

To be most useful, a digital record would have to be widely adopted — by government­s checking travelers, by airlines and ship lines screening passengers, by businesses restrictin­g admission and by the hodgepodge of health-care providers, government agencies and pharmacies that are giving the shots.

Who is using it?

In February, Israel’s government began issuing its digital Green Pass or a physical certificat­e to people who had been vaccinated, and it is required to enter places like hotels and theaters.

In the past month, hundreds more entities around the world — airlines, government­s, drugstore chains and others — began using privately controlled digital systems to verify health credential­s. Most are using the systems — including one called CommonPass and the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n’s own system, Travel Pass — on a trial basis, to verify negative coronaviru­s tests.

The systems are designed to show proof of vaccinatio­n, as well, if that is required.

In March, Aruba and JetBlue began allowing passengers from the United States to show a negative test using CommonPass, developed by the Commons Project, a Swiss-based nonprofit, with support from the World Economic Forum. Lufthansa passengers flying into the United States can also use it.

Also in March, New York state became the first government in the United States to implement a system, the Excelsior Pass, developed with IBM, which some venues have used to prove vaccinatio­n. The governors of Florida and Texas have vowed to block any such system in their states, calling it government overreach and an invasion of privacy.

Many of the objections that have been raised are about privacy, but people developing the systems say those can be addressed.

CommonPass and its app, for example, do not hold any of the user’s health records, said Paul Meyer, CEO of the Commons Project Foundation. If a participat­ing airline needs to know whether a passenger has had a negative test or inoculatio­n, and a participat­ing pharmacy has the informatio­n, CommonPass can communicat­e with both and return a simple yes or no answer, without transmitti­ng any specific data.

 ?? DAN BALILTY / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Music fans show their “Green Pass” before entering a concert in Tel Aviv on March 26. Vaccine passports are also stirring complicate­d political and ethical debates about discrimina­tion, inequality, privacy and fraud.
DAN BALILTY / THE NEW YORK TIMES Music fans show their “Green Pass” before entering a concert in Tel Aviv on March 26. Vaccine passports are also stirring complicate­d political and ethical debates about discrimina­tion, inequality, privacy and fraud.

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