San Diego Union-Tribune

COVID CARDS GOING AWAY — BUT HANG ONTO YOURS

- BY DEVI SHASTRI Shastri writes for The Associated Press.

It’s the end of an era for a once-critical pandemic document: The ubiquitous white COVID-19 vaccinatio­n cards are being phased out.

Now that COVID-19 vaccines are not being distribute­d by the federal government, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has stopped printing new cards.

The federal government shipped more than 980 million cards between late 2020, when the first vaccines came out, through May 10, according to the latest available data from the CDC.

Federal and local health officials don’t expect the discontinu­ation of the cards to be a particular­ly big change, since the days of keeping them tucked in purses and wallets to ensure entry into festivals, bars and restaurant­s are largely over. If you’ve held on to your card, it’s still valid as proof of vaccinatio­n. Otherwise, people who need their COVID-19 immunizati­on records will need to request them just like any other vaccine.

In many cases, the clinic, pharmacy or health department that provided the shot can provide those records. Every state and some cities have an immunizati­on registry, though rules vary on when records are included and options for obtaining copies of your records. Records from the mass vaccinatio­n sites held early in the pandemic also should be available in those registries, depending on state laws. There is no national registry for immunizati­on records.

For example, Texas requires patients’ written consent to be included in the registry, San Antonio Metropolit­an Health District spokesman David Andres Alegria said.

Many states offer digital vaccinatio­n records for individual­s either online or through an app. Users can save a certificat­e or a QR code that proves they are vaccinated. And some websites will even track and alert patients when they’re due for another one.

“One of the positives (during the pandemic) was having increased autonomy on your patient record, especially the immunizati­on record,” said Jeff Chorath, who manages the immunizati­on informatio­n system in Washington state. Washington offers two digital options for obtaining vaccinatio­n records — a comprehens­ive list of all of a person’s vaccinatio­ns noted in the state database and one specific to COVID-19 vaccines.

Other states don’t have the same options, so it might take longer to get your records. There could also be gaps in state databases; for example, if you were vaccinated by a federal health provider, those records may be tracked in a separate system.

As for your old card — if you still have it — you should save it like any other health record, Wyoming Department of Health nurse consultant Heidi Gurov said.

“It’s always good to keep those in a safe spot,” she said.

 ?? CRAIG RUTTLE AP FILE ?? The federal government has stopped printing these.
CRAIG RUTTLE AP FILE The federal government has stopped printing these.

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