Ticket to Freedom – Vaccine Passport: Is it possible to divide people into people with and without antibodies?



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Although there is much talk about the vaccination passport, there is no decision on it in Lithuania or in the European Union (EU).

In January, Prime Minister Ingrida Šimonytė considered that people who had been vaccinated with coronavirus, all those with antibodies, could have a separate document.

This would allow a part of the public not to be subject to quarantine conditions.

But in early February, the prime minister was no longer sure of the document.

I. Šimonytė stated that the EU is likely to agree to such a document when traveling from one state to another, and no decision has been taken in Lithuania.

Not only that, the prime minister even hinted that he hopes to handle the situation within the country without this passport.

Health Minister Arūnas Dulkys recently stated that he sees that passport only as a joint EU project.

“The vaccination passport and the rules for its use only seem to make sense if its rules and use are agreed across the EU, and not just by adapting some of its uses at the national level,” he said a good week ago.

Government photo Ingrida Šimonytė

Government photo Ingrida Šimonytė

However, according to the laws of our country, would it be possible to divide people according to their health status into people with and without antibodies?



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