KEY POINTS
  • A World Health Organization official said the agency does not recommend nations issue so-called immunity passports for the coronavirus. 
  • Some countries have said they would issue passports or certificates that indicate whether someone has had Covid-19, allowing them to travel or return to work, assuming that they are protected.
  • Scientists still don't know how long immunity really lasts, Dr. Jarbas Barbosa, assistant director of the WHO's Pan American Health Organization, said at a press briefing on Wednesday.
An airport employee checks the passports of a couple of passengers who prepare to board a United Airlines flight with at Toncontin International Airport as international flights restarted operating after five months of suspension due to the new coronavirus pandemic in Tegucigalpa on August 17, 2020.

A World Health Organization official said Wednesday that the international agency does not recommend countries issue so-called immunity passports for the coronavirus, because scientists are still unsure whether Covid-19 antibodies reduce the risk of reinfection. 

Earlier in the pandemic, some countries said they would issue passports or certificates that indicate whether someone has had Covid-19, allowing them to travel or return to work, assuming that they are protected.