Vaccine Credential Technology Principles
Divya Siddarth, Vi Hart, Bethan Cantrell, Kristina Yasuda, Josh, Mandel, Karen Easterbrook

TL;DR
This paper discusses the technological, ethical, and implementation challenges of digital vaccine credentials, emphasizing the importance of principles to mitigate harms and ensure equitable, privacy-preserving solutions for future use.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of vaccine credentialing principles, highlighting ethical concerns and proposing guidelines to improve technology deployment and address potential inequalities.
Findings
Identification of key ethical concerns in vaccine credentialing
Proposal of principles to guide ethical and effective implementation
Discussion of technological tradeoffs and privacy considerations
Abstract
The historically rapid development of effective COVID-19 vaccines has policymakers facing evergreen public health questions regarding vaccination records and verification. Governments and institutions around the world are already taking action on digital vaccine certificates, including guidance and recommendations from the European Commission, the WHO, and the Biden Administration. These could be encouraging efforts: an effective system for vaccine certificates could potentially be part of a safe return to work, travel, and daily life, and a secure technological implementation could improve on existing systems to prioritize privacy, streamline access, and build for necessary interoperability across countries and contexts. However, vaccine credentials are not without potential harms, and, particularly given major inequities in vaccine access and rollout, there are valid concerns that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · Virology and Viral Diseases
