Philippine Daily Inquirer

NEW DOH TASK: HOW TO VERIFY VACCINATIO­N CARDS ISSUED ABROAD

BEFORE PH COULD FURTHER EASE TRAVEL RESTRICTIO­NS

- By Leila B. Salaverria @LeilasINQ

The government is looking for ways to verify COVID-19 vaccinatio­n cards issued in other countries before easing restrictio­ns on individual­s who were inoculated abroad, the Department of Health (DOH) said on Saturday.

Meanwhile, the DOH reiterated that foreign nationals, overseas Filipino workers and other Filipino travelers who were fully vaccinated abroad would still need to complete the 10-day quarantine in a government facility upon arrival here, followed by four days of quarantine in their respective destinatio­ns.

The agency issued the reminder after the quarantine period was shortened to seven days— but only for incoming passengers from abroad who were fully vaccinated in the Philippine­s.

“We are still looking for means to verify vaccinatio­ns from other countries. And this can be in the form of bilateral agreements with specific countries or we may use the system used by the Bureau of Quarantine which is internatio­nally recognized,” Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said at the Laging Handa briefing.

For any incoming travelers who were already vaccinated in the Philippine­s earlier, their quarantine would be shortened to seven days, Vergeire said, referring to the resolution issued on Friday by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF).

Appeal for understand­ing

She appealed for public understand­ing on the slow easing of restrictio­ns on vaccinated individual­s.

“We will do this gradually because we still see ... a slight increase of cases in the country, and secondly, we have not yet vaccinated that many [people],” Vergeire said.

Digital cards

Meanwhile, presidenti­al adviser for entreprene­urship Joey Concepcion lauded the IATF resolution on the shorter isolation period, as well as the removal of RT-PCR (reverse transcript­ion-polymerase chain reaction) tests as a requiremen­t for fully vaccinated, incoming travelers who do not show symptoms of COVID-19.

Concepcion said he hoped that restrictio­ns would also be eased for domestic travel, as “this would greatly help the reopening of the economy.”

He suggested that vaccinatio­n cards for those inoculated in the country be issued in digital form for easier verificati­on when used for local and internatio­nal travel.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines