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Reader question: When will Italy recognise the Indian-produced AstraZeneca vaccine?

Various countries across the EU have announced approval of the Indian-produced batches of AstraZeneca, known as Covishield, allowing quarantine-free travel. With Italy yet to follow, many readers immunised with this jab have contacted The Local to ask how they can travel to Italy. Here's what you need to know.

Reader question: When will Italy recognise the Indian-produced AstraZeneca vaccine?
Photo: TAUSEEF MUSTAFA / AFP

Question: We were vaccinated with the AstraZeneca jabs that were produced in India, called Covishield. We would like to travel to Italy but we heard these particular batches won’t be accepted there. What can we do?

Italy opened up its borders to vaccinated travellers for the summer back in May in accordance with the European Medicines Agency (EMA) approved vaccines list.

Travel was re-introduced under the EU’s ‘health pass’ scheme, allowing people to travel within the bloc quarantine-free based on proof that you have either been fully vaccinated, have recently tested negative or have antibodies after recovering from Covid-19.

Proof of being fully immunised is currently recognised if you’ve had one of the following EMA-authorised vaccines:

  • Spikevax (previously Moderna)
  • Pfizer-BioNTech (also called Comirnaty)
  • Vaxzevria (also called AstraZeneca)
  • Johnson & Johnson (also called Janssen)

Showing evidence of the Pfizer, UK-made AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson and Moderna vaccines allows travellers to come to Italy without quarantining on arrival, although there are exceptions to this, such as for those arriving from the UK who still have to complete a five-day quarantine.

However, many travellers have found that even though they were vaccinated with the AstraZeneca vaccine, they are blocked from entering Italy via proof of vaccination – because the country still doesn’t recognise three batches that were produced by the Serum Institute of India (SII), known as Covishield.

Italy still has made no announcement of when – or if – it will begin to recognise the Indian-made AstraZeneca jab.

EU member states can allow entry for people vaccinated with jabs enrolled on the World Health Organisation’s Emergency Use Listing process, which Covishield is, but they can decide not to recognise the vaccine until it is approved by the EMA – which it never did.

And so Italy never did either.

The Covishield vaccine has “not yet been approved by the EMA and are therefore not recognised by the Italian authorities,” stated the Italian consulate in Mumbai.

Would-be holidaymakers took to Twitter last month to express their outrage over upended travel plans. Although the UK’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson told reporters there will “not prove to be a problem” for travellers who have received one of these jabs.

Not only that – since Italy expanded its green pass as a mandatory requirement to access most public sites and venues, people are required to show proof of vaccination, testing or recovery across most of the country after arrival too.

What’s the difference between Vaxzevria and Covishield?

The AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine was first created in the UK by Oxford University and British-Swedish pharmaceutical company, AstraZeneca, and the UK-made version has been identified and sold as Vaxzevria.

Some batches were manufactured in India and identified as Covishield.

The UK received some five million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine from the Serum Institute back in March.

There is no difference between the two AstraZeneca vaccines – only that the EMA is yet to approve the one made by the Serum Institute of India.

Photo by TAUSEEF MUSTAFA / AFP

How do I know if my AstraZeneca jab was one of the Covishield batches?

If you received an AstraZeneca vaccine dose, you can find out which batch your jab came from by looking on your vaccination card – the batch number is listed alongside the type of vaccine you received and the date of your vaccination.

The numbers of the Indian-produced AstraZeneca batches still not currently approved by the EMA are 4120Z001, 4120Z002 and 4120Z003.

NHS app users in England and Wales can check their batch number on the app.

Canadian travellers can check their personal immunisation records.

American travellers would need to look on their CDC vaccination cards.

Despite Italy not recognising Covishield as proof of immunisation, one reader who received one shot of an Indian-made batch of AstraZeneca told The Local her proof of vaccination was accepted when she travelled to Italy in July.

She was vaccinated in the UK with one Covishield jab and the second dose was the British-manufactured AstraZeneca.

However, both vaccines are labelled as ‘Vaxzevria’ as they were both administered in the UK, in accordance with guidelines set out by the UK’s Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC).

So only by reading the batch numbers can you tell the origin.

Whether not having Covishield specifically written on your document would be accepted for travellers from other destinations such as the US, Canada and Australia is unclear, as UK arrivals must quarantine anyway.

READ ALSO:

What can I do if Italy doesn’t approve Covishield?

Italy confirmed it would recognise Covid health certificates from five non-EU countries last month, including Canada, Israel, Japan, the UK and the US.

While visitors from Canada, Israel, Japan and the US can already use health certificates issued in their own countries to avoid quarantine in Italy, the Italian government continues to impose separate restrictions on the UK that oblige travellers to self-isolate for five days on arrival until August 30th.

For details on which countries need to quarantine and those who can avoid it, check here.

If you’ve been vaccinated with Covishield, your other two options are testing or showing proof of recovery.

And once you’re in Italy, this still holds true. If you can’t show proof of having recovered from the virus within the previous six months, you’ll need to keep getting tested in order to access most of Italy’s cultural sites and leisure venues including indoor restaurants, museums, concert venues, gyms, spas, theme parks and much more.

EXPLAINED:

Do other EU countries recognise the Covishield batches?

Other countries in the EU and Schengen area have approved the Indian-produced vaccine, including France, which announced last month that travellers immunised with Covishield could enter the country without quarantining.

The EU countries that currently accept the vaccine produced in India are: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Finland, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Slovenia, the Netherlands, France, Romania, Spain and Sweden, with the addition of Switzerland outside the EU.

The Local will continue to follow any updates to the travel restrictions closely. Please check our homepage or travel news section for the most recent reports on any changes

For more information about the current coronavirus-related restrictions on travel to Italy please see the Foreign Ministry’s website (in English).

Member comments

  1. I sent a mail to EMA asking about when they would approve the AZ from India. Below the answer:

    Thank you for contacting EMA regarding the AstraZeneca vaccine manufactured by Serum Institute of India (also commercialised under the name Covishield).

    At present, COVID-19 vaccines manufactured by the Serum Institute of India are not authorised in the EU. This means that batches of such vaccine that may have been approved by other regulatory jurisdictions are not considered to be the same as the EU product, Vaxzevria.

    EU law requires the manufacturing sites and production process for a vaccine to be assessed and approved as part of the authorisation process. Vaccines are biological products and even tiny differences in the manufacturing conditions can result in differences in the final product.

    EMA can only evaluate a vaccine or a manufacturing site once it receives a valid request to do so from the company. Should the Agency receive a request for marketing authorisation of Covishield, it will make this public. Similarly, should new sites be approved for the manufacture of Vaxzevria, we will communicate it on our website.

    Importantly, the approval process for the use of a vaccine in the EU is an entirely separate issue from permission to travel. EMA is not responsible for any decision regarding national, EU or international travelling conditions associated with COVID-19 vaccination. National quarantine rules, entry requirements and border control are matters within the remit of the appropriate national border control and immigration agencies.

    The European Commission has issued a statement making it clear that it is for Member States to decide whether to accept vaccination certificates issued in relation to vaccines that have been authorised at national level or by the World Health Organization (WHO): [https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/QANDA_21_2781].

  2. Looks as if there was an ordinance on 1st September placing onus on the the carrier for checking jabs/COVID tests and other documentation prior to travel. With BA, we scanned both the above plus the passenger locator form and loaded onto their Verifly system which was checked and confirmed ok a day or so prior to travel. Once at the airport and checking in our bags, all we had to do was to show the Verify confirmation and no more questions were asked. At Rome airport, our flight was separated out from other arrivals and went through immigration in small groups. Passports were stamped but they were not interested in any paperwork when offered.

    So basically, if you’re unsure, I think the best thing is to get your paperwork verified by your airline in advance. I’m assuming other airlines have similar systems but maybe ring and check.

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COVID-19 RULES

Italy allows suspended anti-vax doctors to return to work

Italian heathcare staff suspended over their refusal to be vaccinated against Covid-19 can now return to work, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni confirmed on Monday.

Italy allows suspended anti-vax doctors to return to work

Italy become the first country in Europe to make it obligatory for healthcare workers to be vaccinated, ruling in 2021 that they must have the jab or be transferred to other roles or suspended without pay.

That obligation had been set to expire in December, but was brought forward to Tuesday due to “a shortage of medical and health personnel”, Health Minister Orazio Schillaci said.

READ ALSO: Is Italy’s government planning to scrap all Covid measures?

Italy was the first European country to be hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic in early 2020, and has since registered nearly 180,000 deaths.

Schillaci first announced the plan to scrap the rule on Friday in a statement saying data showed the virus’ impact on hospitals  “is now limited”.

Those who refuse vaccination will be “reintegrated” into the workforce before the rule expires at the end of this year, as part of what the minister called a “gradual return to normality”.

Meloni said the move, which has been criticised by the centre-left as a win for anti-vax campaigners, would mean some 4,000 healthcare workers can return to work.

This includes some 1,579 doctors and dentists refusing vaccination, according to records at the end of October, representing 0.3 percent of all those registered with Italy’s National Federation of the Orders of Physicians, Surgeons and Dentists (Fnomceo) 

Meloni’s post-fascist Brothers of Italy party railed against the way Mario Draghi’s government handled the pandemic, when it was the main opposition party, and she promised to use her first cabinet meetings to mark a clear break in policies with her predecessor.

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