During
this pandemic period, one of the controversial concept, that some governments
have suggested including Germany, Chile, Italy, the US, the UK is the use of
immunity passport –ie, a document that certifies an individual has been infected,
recovered and is purportedly immune to SARS-CoV-2 by performing a blood test.
Imagine a future where our job and all sorts of normal social activities will
be based on blood testing. A positive antibody test and a negative virus test
will help the individual to get an immunity pass and will be relaxed from
physical restrictions and can return back to normal life. Given that the person
is proven immune to the disease and can’t get re-infected and so no potential
public health risk. This has been proposed in order to begin reopening of the economy around the world.
Chile
become the first country to provide certificates and officials in Italy and
Germany are also considering it. In China, “heath code” apps are used to decide the movement of people. India’s own contact tracing app Aarogya Setup is designed
to keep track of the users and alert them when they come in contact with
COVID-19 patients, but it will not restrict the people’s movement. Obtaining
the immunity pass will provide some privilege to the recovered patients, but have
a negative impact on the healthy, non-immune people who managed to stay safe
and ward-off virus.
Some
of the health, experts are debating the idea of giving this passport because
this will only work if people really are immune to re-infection. Reports from
South Korea and China suggested some recovered patients getting re-infected.
Most of the studies show people who recovered develop antibodies to the virus,
but some of them have very low levels of neutralizing antibodies in their
blood. No evidence suggesting how long the developed immunity last to guarantee
future protection.
One
of the major issue highlighted by WHO include unsatisfactory results with the
available rapid immunodiagnostic tests, which needs further validation to
decide their accuracy and reliability. Low specificity cause false-positive
results leading people to think they are immune when they aren’t, whereas low
sensitivity cause false-negative results in people who have few antibodies. It
is needed to differentiate between past infection from SARS-CoV-2 and those
caused by the 6 known set of human coronaviruses. Two among them are viruses
that cause MERS and SARS. People infected with anyone of these viruses may
produce antibodies which will cross-react with antibodies produced in response
to SARS-COV-2 infection. Remaining 4 viruses cause the common cold and
circulate in the body. Then the volume of testing needed is unfeasible. Two
tests per person are minimum required because anyone tested negative might
later become infected and needed to be retested to be immune certified.
Another
important aspect is to understand the proportion of a population that has been
infected with SARS-COV-2. The term Positive Predictive value (PPV) which means
“the probability that subjects with a positive screening test truly have the
disease” is directly related to the prevalence of the disease in a population. For
any given test (ie specificity & sensitivity remain the same) as prevalence
decreases, PPV decreases because there will be more false positive for every
true positive. So when the prevalence of disease increases, PPV increases because
there will be less false-positive cases. This is an important concept. For an immune passport to work, there have to be enough potential passport holders to
boost the economy.
Countries
with the highest, COVID-19 infections rate may have the best reason to create
immunity passport, but the number of recovered patients may not be enough to
make the development of this program worthwhile. The WHO estimated that only
2-3% of the global population had recovered from the virus as of April
2020. Though it varies by region, no more than 5% of the population have
antibodies (by contrast, around 70% of the population needs to have antibodies
either through recovery or vaccination).
Countries
like New Zealand, Australia. Taiwan, Vietnam that have successfully flattened
the curve –had fewer cases and thus less incentive to initiate immunity
passport.
Ethical
challenges include monitoring private details which could be people’s travel
history, locations and other health information. Marginalized groups (racial,
religious and other minority groups) will face more scrutiny. In the US,
digital incarceration has already increased. Shortage of testing suggests that the
wealthy and powerful are more likely to obtain a test than the poor and
vulnerable. Social and financial inequities would be amplified. People will be
divided and labelled as immune-privileged and immune-deprived. Employers
preferentially hire those having confirmed immunity. There will be a new form of
discrimination, when employers, insurance companies and law-officers access
private (mental health records and genetic information) details for their own
benefit. People who managed to stay at home wilfully seek out infection
–putting themselves at risk to get the benefits of passport holders. Sometimes
they obtain documents illicitly through bribery, forgery.
There
are “vaccination certificates” permissible under the International Health
Regulations, which are already accepted by the WHO. They incentivize
individuals to obtain vaccination against the virus whereas immunity passport
incentivize infection.
Confronting with
these challenges, till vaccination, government officials should invest
available time, talent and money into areas like a test, trace and isolate.
Health and personal data should be anonymised. All policies and practices must
be guided by a commitment to social justice.Miss Maria Thomas 5th Pharm.D


Very informative. Can see a lot of research and effort has gone into this! ��
ReplyDeleteGood effort 👏👏
ReplyDeleteVery good Maria..
ReplyDeleteGood job
ReplyDeleteGreat work...
ReplyDeleteGreat efforts 👏👏 and Hands off to ISPOR KUHS.How far pandemic conditions can be prevented by using of other Vaccinations?
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your kind words.
DeleteTill now there is no promising vaccine to prevent the current pandemic.Above 100 different vaccine research are undergoing around the world.But for sure, one of the effort will give us vaccine in the next 18 months.
Good effort and so informative.keep going on.😊
ReplyDeleteGood work...
ReplyDeleteGood effort 👍
ReplyDelete