Half of US States Using SMART Health Cards, Linked to WHO Vaccine Passport Program

March 2, 2022 in News by RBN Staff

source:  needtoknownews

 

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The World Health Organization (WHO) is building a “trust network” vaccine passport for international travel. The Vaccination Credential Initiative (VCI) is behind SMART Health Cards that are vaccine passports that have already been implemented by 25 US states. VCI was created by the MITRE Corporation, which is funded by the United States government. VCI’s members include Google, Amazon, dozens of insurance companies, hospitals, “bio-security firms” and many major universities in the US. While the Biden administration has said it wouldn’t issue digital vaccine credentials, corporate giants partner with government and serve as fronts for government programs. Microsoft, Google et al. take government money to help create the tech, they then run the program, harvest and store the data, and make it available to the government when they want it.

BUILDING A ‘TRUST FRAMEWORK’ — The World Health Organization will convene member states and leaders of Covid-19 immunization credential technology groups to recognize different vaccine certificates across nations and regions, a top Vaccination Credential Initiative official told POLITICO’s Ben Leonard.

The WHO is bringing together the groups to develop a “trust framework” that would allow countries to verify whether vaccine credentials are legitimate, said Brian Anderson, chief digital health physician at MITRE and a co-founder of the VCI.

Why it matters: The effort would aid international travel by allowing proof of vaccination to be more easily shared and verified, Anderson said. Many countries and regions have different standards for proof of inoculation, creating confusion for travelers and officials.

“It’s piecemeal, not coordinated and done nation to nation,” Anderson said. “It can be a real challenge.”

The WHO would say only that news on the topic should be coming “soon.”

The VCI is behind SMART Health Cards, which have become the de facto standard for digital vaccine credentials in the U.S., with dozens of states developing or adopting the technology. The group will participate in the initiative.

It’s unclear whether the U.S. would participate. The White House and the Departments of State and HHS didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Background: The move would be the most significant coordinated international push to enable interoperable credentials among nations and regions.

Existing standards include a digital Covid certificate for European Union member nations. The U.S. has no official standard despite SMART Health Cards’ dominance.

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