Friday, March 29, 2024
HomeOPINIONCan vaccine passports end quarantine?

Can vaccine passports end quarantine?

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CHIANG RAI, 3 February 2021: Thailand’s Minister of Tourism is lobbying hard to allow vaccinated tourists to visit the country without a 14-day quarantine.

He talks about getting the measure approved by April or May and that once in place it could spell recovery for Thailand with tourist arrivals lifting off from ground zero to between 5 to 10 million by the end of the year.

But for Thailand accepting tourists who have been vaccinated is one matter while travellers having reliable proof they have received the required jabs and are now immune to Sars-CoV-19 virus is an entirely different matter.

The big push globally focuses on countries recognising a vaccine certificate or passport and how to distribute them, either through an app or in print, to those who have been vaccinated.

Printing of millions of blank certificates even to just cover those who intend to travel and have a passport would be an expensive task.  For a soft (app) or hard certification (print) to be trustworthy, it would require a single recognised and internationally approved template, just like our passports. As for the minister’s timeline, we might ask. How long will it take for governments to accept that vaccinated travellers can cross borders without quarantine?   How long will it take to have in place jab certificates that comply with a recognised template to demonstrate they are genuine?

Already there are fraudsters around the world printing certificates of entry, fit-to-fly letters and even false PCR test results that look pretty authentic with all the right boxes ticked. In London, they sell the bogus certificates with impunity at the entrances of Heathrow’s terminal buildings according to a recent BBC report.

There’s plenty of scepticism on the subject. Public health experts raise concerns because vaccinated people may still spread the virus. It would also penalise those who object to vaccination leading to a form of social discrimination.

For obvious reasons, tourist destinations like Spain, Greece, Portugal and Cyprus would support the vaccine certification push. On the other hand, France, which has experienced higher levels of vaccine scepticism has already rejected the idea, ABC News reported last week.

It reported that “Cyprus would abolish quarantine rules for travellers, if they were vaccinated, by March. In Poland, citizens who receive a second jab will soon be given a vaccine passport in the form of a QR code, and Denmark is also moving ahead with a similar system that will enable travel.” The UK is considering an app, but like all the proposals, there are security and fraud concerns.

So even if Thailand’s Minister of Tourism succeeds the chances of countries having certificates available and enough vaccinated citizens ready travel by April is slim indeed.

If jab certification is the solution, it would be better to join international efforts to introduce a single recognisable immunisation certificate or passport accepted by the World Health Organisation’s member countries.

Jab race gains momentum

Statista reports that “early efforts to secure vaccine candidates, quick approval progress by authorities and effective infrastructure for administration, means governments are already racing ahead in their efforts to start mass vaccination against Covid-19.

“Website ‘Our World in Data’, keeps tabs on the jabs and its findings show that Israel leads the race to reach the 60 to 70% threshold needed to suppress the spread of Covid-19 among the general population.

“As of late January, Israel administered 54.72 doses per 100 of its citizens, some 4.7 million in total. That is the highest rate of Covid-19 vaccination so far, considerably more than second-placed UAE’s 33.7 doses per 100 inhabitants and the UK’s 13.95 doses per 100 of its citizens. In the United States, the rate of vaccination stands at 9.4 jabs for every 100 people.”

Source https://www.statista.com/

4 COMMENTS

  1. Terrible idea. Almost proves the “conspiracy theorists” right when they said, a few years back now, that we’ll eventually need to be vaccinated to travel and do anything else.

    This is pharmaceutical tyranny and must be opposed at all costs. Risking serious and possibly permanent side effects if not death just for the “privilege” to travel is outright draconian and will lead to a two-tier society. It will also kill tourism. Forget about 40 million visitors to Thailand ever again, if this goes live and stays in place.

    At best, allow vaccinated travelers to forego quarantine now, but 3-6 months later remove all vaccination and other requirements and allow normal travel to resume like in 2019.

  2. I wonder why WHO, UNWTO, WTTC and IATA don’t put their heads together to push the health passport in manner to help domestic and international travel return as soon as possible or as @Robert de Graff mentioned here is already accepted and used internationally.

  3. Why not use the Yellow Vaccination books ( called International Certificate of Vaccination or Prophylaxis ) which are already in use worldwide, and no need to re-invent the wheel??

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