Google AI
The Times Australia
The Times News

.

Times Media Advertising

Before we introduce vaccine passports we need to know how they'll be used

  • Written by: Tim Dare, Professor of Philosophy, University of Auckland

Air New Zealand is to trial digital “vaccine passports” on trans-Tasman routes in April. A media release[1] says: “The goal is to enable customers to seamlessly manage their digital travel documentation throughout their travel experience.”

And it’s easy to see why. Airlines want people back in the air, the tourism industry wants them back in their hotels, restaurants and rental cars. And many of us have family and friends overseas — my daughter is having a baby in Melbourne in July and I want to visit!

The airline will be using the Travel Pass[2] app offered by the International Air Transport Association (IATA), which it says has been “developed with the highest levels of data privacy and security”.

But vaccine passports bring significant risks. We should identify those risks and what we are going to do about them before wholesale introduction.

Unequal access to passports

The use to which a vaccine passport might be put is key. Air New Zealand is interested in trans-Tasman travel, but without clear controls in place it seems very likely there will be pressure to expand reliance on them.

Elsewhere we have seen suggestions they be used[3] to control access to or participation in a range of places and activities with a risk of COVID transmission — sporting events, public venues, even workplaces.

Read more: A COVID 'vaccine passport' may further disadvantage refugees and asylum seekers[4]

Why would that matter? If they are good for airlines, wouldn’t they be good in other contexts, too? One reason to worry is that vaccines — and therefore vaccine passports — will not be available[5] to everyone.

Some access issues are matters of global justice. The citizens of many countries will not have access to vaccines in the near future. As is often the case, people who are already disadvantaged will bear further burdens.

Who gets a passport first?

Perhaps this will seem all too remote and idealistic, but there will be domestic versions of these concerns too.

Some New Zealanders might be unable or unwilling to have COVID vaccines because of existing health conditions. On current roll-out plans[6], others will have to wait in line behind prioritised groups such as border, quarantine and health workers.

There will also be people who choose not to be vaccinated because of principled objections to vaccination, but we can perhaps put that group aside for the moment. Any disadvantage they suffer will at least have been willingly taken on.

Read more: Can governments mandate a COVID vaccination? Balancing public health with human rights – and what the law says[7]

So the significance of access to vaccination — and vaccine passports — will depend crucially on the limits placed on their use.

If it simply prevents people travelling to Australia, or makes such trips more burdensome, society might tolerate the discrimination unequal access will cause. If it affects people’s capacity to socialise, work or travel domestically, it will be a more serious issue.

How reliable will passports be?

Other potential risks flow from the fact a variety of vaccines[8] will be available and new COVID strains will emerge regularly. If the vaccines are not all equally effective, or more infectious new variants of the virus affect their performance, how will vaccine passports reflect this?

We might assume vaccine passports give those relying on them — whether officials administering travel permissions or fellow passengers — evidence of the risk posed by a passport holder. But it may be that not all passport holders are equally immune.

If there are doubts a passport truly means its holder has had an effective vaccine or has immunity against some recent strain, the value of the passport diminishes. We may still have cause to worry about the risk posed by the person in the seat next to us.

Read more: A vaccine will be a game-changer for international travel. But it's not everything[9]

As with any digital system, there will be privacy and information security issues too. Air New Zealand has described the proposed Travel Pass as “a place to store all your health credentials digitally in one place”.

It seems unlikely it would hold that much information — we haven’t achieved that with hospital-based electronic health records — and that would be a good thing.

A set of standards would no doubt address what information was held on the app and who it could be shared with. We should have those standards in place before we allow passports.

Hand applying sticker to vaccination certificate Confirmation of vaccination being added to an International Certificate of Vaccination or Prophylaxis (ICVP), also known as the carte jaune or yellow card. GettyImages

New age, new risks

It has been pointed out that vaccine passports are not new: the World Health Organisation’s “yellow card[10]”, an international certificate to record inoculations against yellow fever, cholera, typhus and smallpox has been around since the 1930s.

But it’s not clear what we should make of the example. The yellow card might pose significant ethical risk, too, if access to vaccines is unequal or there are concerns about the reliability of cards.

As serious as these diseases are, they are rare or endemic to certain areas: the scale of the COVID pandemic makes some ethical risks more likely and more pressing. Some of those risks flow from vaccine passports being proposed in a digital age, where information can be held and shared in ways unimaginable only a couple of decades ago.

Furthermore, the yellow card has the backing of international health regulations that specify conditions for validity.

No shared standards

Finally, vaccination passports seem likely to vary in an important way from the passports we know best. The value of regular passports rests on the shared international standards that lie behind them.

If I produce a valid passport, an immigration official knows I am a New Zealand citizen, that my identity has been confirmed, that my passport photo is a reasonable likeness, and so on.

There are no such shared standards for vaccine passports, so it is much less clear what can be assumed about the passport holder. The very thing that makes passports valuable might not be true of a vaccine passport.

The point here is not that vaccine passports are a bad idea. They might be an important part of managing COVID. But we should be clear about the risks such passports pose and about how we are going to manage those risks before they get a foot in the door.

Read more https://theconversation.com/before-we-introduce-vaccine-passports-we-need-to-know-how-theyll-be-used-156197

Times Magazine

VoltX Energy expands into Victoria & ACT to meet surging home battery demand

Leading Australian energy solutions provider VoltX Energy and premier sponsor of the NRL Manly Wa...

Victorian Drivers To Receive 20% Rego Rebate From June 1 In Major Cost-Of-Living Measure

Victorian motorists will begin receiving significant registration savings from June 1 as the Allan...

How Australian Businesses Are Using AI To Cut Costs And Improve Efficiency

Artificial intelligence was once viewed by many small business owners as something futuristic, exp...

Quickest Way of Getting Rid of Your Old Cars in Brisbane?

If you are done searching for a practical solution for quickly getting rid of your old car, this w...

The Human Supplement Craze Has Officially Gone to the Dogs (Literally)

Australians’ appetite for supplements is no longer limited to their own vitamin cabinets. New reta...

AI Guilt: It’s Real — But it is irrational

Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming one of the most powerful tools ever made available to ...

Australians Are Keeping Their Cars Longer — And It’s Changing The Market

Australia’s car market is undergoing a subtle but important transformation. People are keeping th...

Streaming Fatigue: Australians Overwhelmed By Subscriptions

Streaming was once supposed to simplify entertainment. Instead, many Australians now feel overwhe...

Why Shopping Centres No Longer Feel Exciting

There was a time when going to the shopping centre felt like an event. Families spent entire Satu...

The Times Features

Low Maintenance Front Garden Ideas with Tropical Hibisc…

Front garden inspired by tropical low-maintenance design Introduction Creating an attractive front...

How Solar + Battery + Electricity Credits Work Together…

In Australia, more households are turning to solar and battery systems as electricity prices conti...

Most Australians think the Budget Just Changed the Rule…

A generation of Australians may be entering the biggest rethink of wealth creation since the rise ...

Remember All-You-Can-Eat Restaurants? Australia Still M…

For many Australians, few dining experiences created more excitement than the words: “All you can ...

Australia’s Changing Family Dynamic: When Adult Childre…

Australia’s housing affordability crisis is no longer simply an economic issue. It is reshaping t...

ASX Movements Since Labor’s Budget: What Investors Are …

Australia’s share market has spent recent weeks digesting the implications of Labor’s federal budg...

QLD Day

On Saturday 6 June, parkrun events across the state will be a sea of maroon, with communities  str...

NAGNATA: ‘FUTURE = FIBRE’ — Movement 21 at AFW 2026 …

Photography by Cesar OcampoOn Day 3 of Australian Fashion Week 2026, the energy at the runway shifte...

Flu Season in Australia: Why Health Authorities Are Tak…

As winter settles across Australia, so too does the annual flu season — a recurring health challen...