Related
NHTKL calls for swift implementation of NHI
26 Nov 2024
Complementary medicine can get us closer to universal healthcare
Bianca De Canha 23 Jul 2024
South Africa pursues universal health cover in face of headwinds
Wendell Roelf 14 Jun 2023
The WHO is setting up a gateway for this purpose. It enables QR codes on electronic vaccination certificates to be checked across national borders. It is intended to serve as a standard procedure for other vaccinations such as polio or yellow fever after Covid-19. The WHO has selected T-Systems as an industry partner to develop the vaccination validation services.
Adel Al-Saleh, member of the Deutsche Telekom AG Board of Management and CEO T-Systems, explained: "Corona has a grip on the world. Digitisation keeps the world running. Digital vaccination certificates like the EU's are key to this. We are pleased to be able to support the WHO in the fight against the pandemic. Health is a strategic growth area for T-Systems. Winning this contract underscores our commitment to the industry."
WHO and T-Systems are focusing on transparency and data protection when building the gateway. The ongoing work on the software is public on the developer platform Github. All program codes can be viewed by the expert community there. Furthermore, the gateway complies to the strict privacy law of the European Union, the General Data Protection Regulation.
The gateway will interact with other parts of the system already developed by WHO. These are also open source and with appropriate copyright licenses.
A common security audit with penetration tests is part of the development. This will also give hints for regional and national set-ups to be followed by the implementers.
For T-Systems, the WHO contract is familiar territory. The company had already developed the EU gateway for vaccination certificates (DCC, Digital Covid Certificate). More than 60 countries are connected to it today.
T-Systems had previously set up the European Federation Gateway Service (EFGS). The service ensures that member states' corona tracing apps work across borders.
Telekom and SAP worked closely together on both EU projects. The companies are also industry partners for the German government's Corona-Warn-App. With more than 43 million downloads, the German app is one of the most successful tracing apps in the world. With many additional functions, such as event check-ins or universal certificate storage, it has earned the reputation of being the Swiss army knife in the pandemic.