Evidence of vaccination, eg on the NHS app on your phone, would be enough for me. A lot more efficient than negative test evidence before every game too I thinkHopefully both.
If you’re talking about the card you were given when you received your jabs then that definitely isn’t acceptable as proof of vaccination. It’s hand written and too open to being fake or inaccurate - you were given it purely for information purposes.Either way I don't see it as big a problem as is being reported. Maybe with having to do tests but surely the majority would just show the card with proof of both vaccs
Surely the tests would be more effective as that shows no one has it? Whereas the vaccinations don't actually stop it being spread?Evidence of vaccination, eg on the NHS app on your phone, would be enough for me. A lot more efficient than negative test evidence before every game too I think
Surely the tests would be more effective as that shows no one has it? Whereas the vaccinations don't actually stop it being spread?
That's where I'm a bit confused to the reasoning behind it?
Well these are oft made points, but … though they don’t “stop” they do “significantly reduce” the spread and the chances of catching, so in the much discussed trade-off between physical safety from covid vs mental/emotion/economic health and well being of the population, I’d side with the vaccine passport, as it just makes entry to large events so much more practical and manageable to process.Surely the tests would be more effective as that shows no one has it? Whereas the vaccinations don't actually stop it being spread?
That's where I'm a bit confused to the reasoning behind it?
Hopefully both.