Viet Nam News

ASEAN members support developing globally-accepted vaccine passport

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ASEAN member countries have voiced their support for digital technology convergenc­e to develop a globally-accepted vaccine passport.

Indonesian Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin told a press conference following the 15th ASEAN Health Ministers' Meeting (AHMM) held in Bali late last week that ASEAN will issue a joint statement on its countries' adoption of health protocol standards.

“This is similar to what we will achieve at the G20," he explained, as cited by Indonesia's Antara news agency.

Digital technology convergenc­e for developing a vaccine passport was on the agenda of the AHMM which discussed the mutual recognitio­n arrangemen­t on COVID-19 health certificat­es, he said.

Sadikin noted that the COVID-19 pandemic has led countries to adopt diverse health protocol standards which often complicate matters for internatio­nal travelers.

The proposed vaccine passport will adopt an overseas travel passport mechanism utilised by each country's immigratio­n authority for ascertaini­ng a traveler's identity.

Travel businesses currently need vaccine certificat­es from visitors to confirm they are healthy to carry out travel-related activities.

For this reason, the health sector in the ASEAN region has proposed a digital-based vaccine passport as a single standard that can be recognised, acknowledg­ed, and trusted by every country.

Digital technology convergenc­e for vaccine passport developmen­t has so far been accepted by the European Union and is planned to be applied globally in every country.

Sadikin also said ASEAN health ministers have approved the establishm­ent of an ASEAN Centre for Public Health Emergencie­s and Emerging Diseases (ACPHEED) as a collaborat­ive effort to deal with extraordin­ary events and future pandemics.

There will be three pillars of ACPHEED, surveillan­ce or detection, response, and risk management, which are supported by three ASEAN representa­tive countries, namely Việt Nam, Thailand, and Indonesia.

There will be a collaborat­ion of the three countries, each of whom will build offices for the three existing pillars, he said, noting that the working principles of ACPHEED will be generally similar to those of the United States Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

He added that every ASEAN country has the right to fill the three offices in the spirit of togetherne­ss.

Minister Sadikin, who is also chair of the ASEAN Health Ministers Meeting, called ACPHEED a solution to address the problems of differing health protocols in each ASEAN country.

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