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Hawaii residents can now check vaccination status online

Hawaii Gov. Josh Green’s administration has unveiled a new website that allows users to check their immunization statuses.
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In what could feel to some like a flashback to the Joe Biden presidency, Hawaii Gov. Josh Green’s administration on Wednesday announced that residents can now access an online portal to check their immunization records.

The system, which the state calls the Hawaii State Immunization System, or HiSIS, Public Portal, allows users to find vaccination records for themselves or their dependents by entering basic identity and contact information. The portal is an extension of HiSIS, which the state launched last June.

Green’s office advertises the portal as “a free secure way” to access “proof of immunization for school, daycare, work, or travel.”

Its launch harkens back to the years of the COVID-19 pandemic, when numerous states and cities launched such portals in an attempt to meet the demand of Americans rushing to prove their vaccination statuses after many businesses and public spaces attempted to limit the spread of a virus that would eventually kill more than 1.2 million Americans.

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In 2022, this publication presented the California state government with an award for offering its population an online tool that uses QR codes to link them to their vaccination statuses. Rick Klau, then the state’s chief technology innovation officer, said the tool was born “out of necessity” as bars and restaurants began requiring people to show proof of vaccination for entrance.

New York City and New York State each launched their own apps, or vaccine “passports,” as some have called them, both of which faced criticism for being rushed to market. One digital privacy advocate showed on social media how he’d proved his vaccination status to the city by uploading an image of Mickey Mouse.

Beyond the websites and apps designed to help residents prove vaccination status, cities struggled during the pandemic also to keep their vaccination appointment platforms online. During the pandemic’s spikes, such portals sometimes crashed, including in Massachusetts, and Washington, D.C., where, in February 2021, tens of thousands of residents tried and failed to book appointments while the virus surged.

Hawaii’s new portal arrives in a year when demand is likely to be lower than during the global health crisis. According to the World Health Organization, COVID-19 deaths in the United States totaled about 1,200 over the last four weeks — each a tragedy, but together a pittance next to the hundreds of thousands of weekly deaths reported (globally) in the worst months 2021 and 2022.

Demand may be lowered too by the messaging of the Department of Health and Human Services, which is headed by a vaccine skeptic who has gutted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine-advisory panel. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also this year announced the agency would no longer recommend healthy children or pregnant women receive COVID-19 vaccination, making those populations ineligible to receive health coverage for such inoculations.

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A WHO study published last year calculated that immunizations — against diphtheria, polio, hepatitis B, tetanus, tuberculosis and a handful of other horrific illnesses — had saved the lives of at least 154 million people over the past 50 years.

Colin Wood

Written by Colin Wood

Colin Wood is the editor in chief of StateScoop and EdScoop. He's reported on government information technology policy for more than a decade, on topics including cybersecurity, IT governance and artificial intelligence. colin.wood@statescoop.com Signal: cwood.64

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