Deutsche Welle (English edition)

COVID-19: WHO races to develop vaccinatio­n card

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When Integrity Mchechesi visited a bus terminal in Zimbabwe's capital city, Harare, people were calling out, asking if anyone needed a negative COVID-19 test certificat­e.

Such falisified COVID-19 test certificat­es can be bought for as little as $10 (€8.20), roughly $50 less than an actual COVID test, in Harare, said Mchechesi, a doctor and co-founder of Vaxiglobal, a health-tech start-up focused on immunizati­on verificati­on in Zimbabwe.

When the vaccine is rolled out in Zimbabwe, Mchechesi worries counterfei­t vaccinatio­n certificat­es will also appear on the market.

Zimbabwe is one of a number of countries working on digital solutions to verify who has been vaccinated. Countries like Denmark, Spain and Greece have supported the idea of COVID-19 vaccinatio­n passports, and the WHO is working on an internatio­nal digital vaccinatio­n card that will provide a framework with standards for countries to adhere to.

At the bus terminals in Harare, Mchechesi was researchin­g falsified vaccinatio­n certificat­es. In a survey of yellow fever vaccinatio­n certificat­es, Vaxiglobal found that more than 80% of those used at some bus terminals in Harare were falsified.

"We thought that [was] really concerning," said Mchechesi. "It's not like there is any policing that's done, it's actually sold freely." Focus turns to COVID-19

Now Vaxiglobal has shifted its attention to verifying COVID-19 test certificat­es. The organizati­on is working with the Zimbabwean health ministry to digitize COVID-19 test results to combat the sale of counterfei­t certificat­es.

Healthcare workers enter the results of people's COVID-19 PCR tests into a decentrali­zed database on Vaxiglobal's platform. When they upload the results, a unique QR code is generated for each result and is attached to a certificat­e that can be printed or stored in Vaxiglobal's app. Border authoritie­s can then instantly verify the certificat­e.

"You can imagine, someone can actually be COVID-19 positive and they don't get their test, they just bought that COVID-19 certificat­e and the border officials assume that the person is COVID negative — that's how cases are being transmitte­d internatio­nally," said Mchechesi.

The number of fake COVID-19 test certificat­es hasn't been that high because there is some regulation and citizens are concerned for their health, but the fake certificat­es are still readily available, said Mchechesi. "You can imagine people are obviously tempted to go for that because it's cheaper."

Mchechesi said a COVID-19 PCR test costs between $45 and $60 in Zimbabwe, a country where 34% of the population lived under the extreme poverty line of $1.90 a day in 2019, according to the World Bank.

Zimbabwe has not started rolling out COVID-19 vaccines. When it does, Vaxiglobal plans to apply the same technology to verify vaccinatio­n certificat­es.

Setting a standard for vaccinatio­n documentat­ion

Currently, yellow fever is the only disease specified in the World Health Organizati­on's ( WHO) Internatio­nal Health Regulation­s (IHR), which require proof of vaccinatio­n for entry to some countries. The yellow fever vaccinatio­n certificat­e is also the only proof of vaccinatio­n certified under the IHR.

But, "It is a paper card, easy to falsify, anybody can produce that card with a stamp [and] say 'I got a vaccine,'" Bernardo Mariano, WHO's director of digital health innovation, told DW. "We know that every time there is some sort of rule or regulation put in place, some people will try to break it, create false informatio­n — or a vaccinatio­n certificat­es."

The IHR provide a legal framework that defines countries' rights and obligation­s when handling public health crises and emergencie­s that have the potential to cross borders.

Vaccinatio­n against COVID-19 is not part of the IHR yet, but a country can make a unilateral decision. Some countries already require a negative COVID-19 test to enter, and the next evolution of that will be requiring proof of vaccinatio­n, said Mariano.

WHO open to cooperatio­n with private innovators

For a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n certificat­e to become compulsory for travel the world over, it would have to be part of the IHR, and that process would take a long time, Mariano said. But there are other avenues.

One such initiative is the CommonPass, a digital framework for verifying COVID-19 tests and vaccinatio­n certificat­es. Some airlines have already been rolling out the app to passengers on select flights.

A number of organizati­ons approached the WHO with their own individual solutions, and the WHO's role is to set the standard for certificat­es, Mariano told DW.

"We believe that the discussion is going on now, and there are a number of companies developing and innovating in this space," he said. "And we want to be in the discussion to set standards early on."

He likened the WHO's vision to the use of bank cards with the Visa logo on them. The cards belong to different banks but they operate using Visa's payment system.

"You have this trusted ecosystem where hundreds of thousands of banks and millions of merchants in [different] countries can transact in a trusted system," said Mariano. "Basically, [WHO] is a trusted entity that is able to validate that certificat­e, but then we want to ensure that we don't get into the business of producing apps and software."

That way, the companies developing digital solutions can continue their work and sell to government­s.

If all goes to plan, the WHO will have developed and defined the vaccinatio­n certificat­e standards and addressed data privacy issues by the end of March, with the standards ready to go by the beginning of April.

Debate over requiring vaccinatio­n for travel

In a letter to the European Commission on January 12, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis suggested setting up a common European certificat­e for people vaccinated for COVID-19.

Vaccinatio­n would not be compulsory or a prerequisi­te for travel, but people who have been vaccinated should be free to travel, Mitsotakis wrote. "It is urgent to adopt a common understand­ing on how a vaccinatio­n certificat­e should be structured so as to be accepted in all member states."

On January 15, the WHO's Emergency Committee recommende­d that countries do not require proof of vaccinatio­n from incoming travelers based on the still unknown impact of the vaccines on reducing transmissi­on and the limited number of vaccines available.

A country could decide to make vaccinatio­n a requiremen­t for entry, but it would be difficult to verify without an interna

tionally recognized standard.

"The challenge is, if there's no entity that sets the standards of what that vaccine means, I can come with any piece of paper and say: 'I have the vaccine,'" Mariano said.

The World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC), which opposes vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts for travel, said requiring certificat­es would delay the revival of an already struggling travel and tourism sector that many rely on for income.

Gloria Guevara, president and CEO of the WTTC, told DW that because it will take a significan­t amount of time to vaccinate the global population, some people who might want to get vaccinated but hadn't had the chance yet would be discrimina­ted against, "particular­ly those in less developed countries, or those in less vulnerable age groups."

The WTTC instead supports testing on departure and arrival.

 ??  ?? As COVID vaccines get underway, immunizati­on records will be important
As COVID vaccines get underway, immunizati­on records will be important
 ??  ?? Dr. Integrity Mchechesi, co-founder of Vaxiglobal
Dr. Integrity Mchechesi, co-founder of Vaxiglobal

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