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COVID-19 HEALTH PASS

France cuts positive Covid test exemption to four months

The validity of proof of recent recovery from Covid - which can be substituted for a vaccination certificate to use the country's vaccine pass - will be cut to a four-month period, the health minister has announced.

A French vaccine pass is scanned outside a restaurant.
A French vaccine pass is scanned outside a restaurant. The validity of proof of recent recovery from Covid as a condition to use the pass is set to shorten. Photo: Loic Venance/AFP

Currently a positive Covid result that is more than 11 days old but less than six months old can be uploaded to the French vaccine pass to allow access to venues including bars, cafés, gyms and tourist sites for those who are not vaccinated.

Both PCR and antigen test results are accepted, but not home tests.

However, health minister Olivier Véran has announced that from February 15th, this period will be cut to four months.

The four-month limit also applies to people who caught Covid before they were able to get a booster shot, which is required in order the keep the vaccine pass activated.

The vaccine pass, introduced on January 24th, requires proof of either vaccination – including a booster shot for many groups – recent recovery from Covid or a certificate of medical exemption in order to access a wide range of everyday venues.

EXPLAINED How to get a certificate of Covid recovery in France

People who tested positive in France or the EU can upload their positive test result directly to the TousAntiCovid app or show a paper version at vaccine pass venues, but people who tested positive outside the EU face a more complicated process – full details here.

Véran said: “In concrete terms, if you had your last injection before October 15th, your pass will no longer be active on February 15th if you have not had your booster dose.”

For people who are not vaccinated but who have tested positive, he said: “You cannot be vaccinated immediately but you will have a certificate of recovery, which will be valid for four months.”

The new four-month limit would mean that, for example, someone who tested positive for Covid in December would not be able to visit the French Open tennis tournament in May – unless of course, they are fully vaccinated with a booster or have a certificate of medical exemption. 

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COVID-19

Will France’s Covid-19 health pass be consigned to the past?

France suspended but did not cancel the Covid pass in March - but the government has suggested it might not return, even with the country in the grip of the virus’s seventh wave

Will France's Covid-19 health pass be consigned to the past?

Cases of Covid-19 in France have risen 57.8 percent in the past week with daily cases topping the 200,000 mark on Tueday.

The virus’s seventh wave has the country in its grip – but it seems the government has no plans to reintroduce vaccine pass measures.

READ ALSO How serious will France’s seventh wave of Covid-19 be?

The vaccine pass –  itself a two-month development of the old health pass which had been required for entry to certain venues such as bars, restaurants and cafes – was suspended on March 14th, as cases of Covid-19 in France fell. But the health emergency law that enforced it was still in effect and allowed it to be reactivated at any time.

That law runs out on July 31st. Now, it seems the pass will not return. Reports in the French press last month claimed that the health ministry was discussing the possibility of re-imposing some form of pass sanitaire, a bill intended to replace the current health emergency laws makes no mention of it. 

The new president of the National Assembly, Yaël Braun-Pivet, confirmed this week that the vaccine pass was not included in the new bill, entitled “health monitoring and security”, which will be submitted to the National Assembly for debate from July 11 and will, if passed, come into law on August 1st – the day after the current law expires.

“[It] is not what is planned in the text of the law that will be submitted to parliament this week,” Braun-Pivet said.

Rather, the bill extends epidemic surveillance and contact case identification systems until March 31st, 2023. 

The second provides for the implementation of border control measures – such as requiring visitors to France to show proof of vaccination or a recent negative test – if a so-called variant of concern were to spread rapidly abroad, as confirmed by new government spokesman Olivier Véran. 

Currently, most health rules in place at the height of the pandemic have been relaxed. Masks are only required in French hospitals, health centres and places that have vulnerable residents such as nursing homes. They are also recommended in crowded spaces where it is impossible to practice social distancing.

READ ALSO French public urged to wear face masks again on public transport

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