The COVID-19 vaccination card looks almost vintage: A rudimentary, wallet-sized ticket of sorts, with some handwritten information and dates of inoculation. It s also a reminder to get your second dose.
But its existence has stirred a lot of discussion about how this proof of vaccination might be used for other COVID-19 pandemic purposes.
We asked regional medical experts about the card and what you ll need to do with it.
Here s who we asked:
M. Sara Rosenthal, Ph.D., professor and director of the University of Kentucky s Program for Bioethics.
Dr. Robert Frenck, principal investigator of the National Institutes of Health-sponsored Vaccine Treatment and Evaluation Unit and director of Gamble Vaccine Research Center. He s leading the COVID-19 vaccine trials at Cincinnati Children s Hospital Medical Center.