RE:RE:RE:RE:Keep you paper docs for now but things are indeed changing !@Razmot, you're totally right. When travelling abroad (i.e. africa, asia, latin america) it's not uncommon to be required to produce a proof of yellow fever, meningitis vaccine or other - without which you simply can't enter the country.
if it was for me, the whole vaccine history would be digital, from which we could generate a country-specific QR code (or other) vaccine passport. The days of having to lug around paper proofs of immunization are outdated - not unlike a horse-drawn wagon vs a car or writing letters instead of emails.
It's well passed time that we move away from paper-based proofs of immunization and onto digital versions. This has nothing to do with political affiliation or ideology. It's a simple question of efficiency and effectiveness.
TheRazmot wrote: <p> Indeed they have been around for decades. </p> <p> Remember having to produce a yellow fever vaccine passeport to get into Thailand in the 19ies!<br /> <br /> They work both ways... When traveling abroad or for visitor.... Hence best way for not letting individuals traveling to Canada bring in new variants or any other spreadable deceases!<br /> <br /> raz </p>