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The article is by a journalist who lost their vaccine card and tried to get it replaced in Texas. They were a good little Jabber who believe in the system and that it'd be no problem to figure it out, only to learn there is no "database" and it's just a cluster***k.

After a long journey they claim they were able to replace it by calling around dozens of places until one said they had him in the system. This is what he found:

If the states were struggling to track vaccines, surely the feds were doing even worse. I googled, “Is there a central covid vaccine database?” That led to a story in The Wall Street Journal saying the United States lacks a central database due to privacy concerns, which leaves “non-standardized impermanent cards as the sole record of shots.”

In Texas if someone Jabs they have to consent to have their Jab entered in the registry. Even if they do, those who did the Shots have to enter it into the database (and many don't) which means what Texas sends through ImmaTrac to the federal database is riddled with holes.

There is almost no central database and if a person needs to replace their vaccine card they have to hunt down the clinic or group that gave them the shot and have them check their paper files.

I googled “ImmTrac.” The immunization registry was established in 1999 to store vaccine records in Texas, mostly for children. The general public has no direct access, and it’s up to school and healthcare officials to enter and access the information. The Texas Department of State Health Services tracks these immunizations, but its own website says the best place to find COVID-19 records is at the clinic that administered the vaccine.

This patchwork effort by Texas officials to track vaccines appears to be hampered by residents’ tendency to protect their privacy.

And Lefties tell us we're in good hands.

Update: This article is two months old, but the information hasn't changed. All vaccination information is held at state and local level. (If there is no federal database then how does the CDC know all who were vaccinated?)

And even most state records are very incomplete. Most of the information stays in the pharmacy or clinic who gave the Jab.

https://nypost.com/2021/08/12/white-house-has-no-plans-for-a-federal-vaccination-database/

2 years ago
2 score
Reason: Original

The article is by a journalist who lost their vaccine card and tried to get it replaced in Texas. They were a good little Jabber who believe in the system and that it'd be no problem to figure it out, only to learn there is no "database" and it's just a cluster***k.

After a long journey they claim they were able to replace it by calling around dozens of places until one said they had him in the system. This is what he found:

If the states were struggling to track vaccines, surely the feds were doing even worse. I googled, “Is there a central covid vaccine database?” That led to a story in The Wall Street Journal saying the United States lacks a central database due to privacy concerns, which leaves “non-standardized impermanent cards as the sole record of shots.”

In Texas if someone Jabs they have to consent to have their Jab entered in the registry. Even if they do, those who did the Shots have to enter it into the database (and many don't) which means what Texas sends through ImmaTrac to the federal database is riddled with holes.

There is almost no central database and if a person needs to replace their vaccine card they have to hunt down the clinic or group that gave them the shot and have them check their paper files.

I googled “ImmTrac.” The immunization registry was established in 1999 to store vaccine records in Texas, mostly for children. The general public has no direct access, and it’s up to school and healthcare officials to enter and access the information. The Texas Department of State Health Services tracks these immunizations, but its own website says the best place to find COVID-19 records is at the clinic that administered the vaccine.

This patchwork effort by Texas officials to track vaccines appears to be hampered by residents’ tendency to protect their privacy.

And Lefties tell us we're in good hands.

2 years ago
1 score