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Showing Original Post only (View all)Airlines Consider Requiring Proof Of Vaccination For Domestic Air Travel [View all]
http://yournewswire.com/airlines-consider-requiring-proof-of-vaccination-for-domestic-air-travel/Traveling by air may get even more complicated if a reported plan by major carrier airlines requiring passengers to be vaccinated comes to fruition. After the increasing problem of unvaccinated individuals contracting and spreading communicable diseases, airlines hope to be a stopgap solution to preventing larger outbreaks. An inside source with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) suggests that, Multiple major carriers have begun discussing requiring vaccination records for all passengers before allowing them to board a flight.
The FAA source, speaking on condition of anonymity explains that many of the airlines have, had it with the anti-vaccination arguments and dont want to be left with the guilt and partial responsibility when a preventable disease spreads by way of air travel. It is assumed that a valid vaccination record will be required upon check in before travelers embark on their journey. Itll add another step to the flight process, but the airlines, so far, are willing to absorb any costs associated with it, said the FAA source. It is not expected to impact the already beleaguered Transportation Security Administration as this would be an elective requirement and not a federally mandated change.
The 2014 2015 U.S. measles outbreak spread to seven states and is widely believed to have been tied to vacationers at the Disneyland amusement park in Anaheim, California. Many speculate the spread of the disease outside of California was exacerbated due to vacationing families traveling by air. By requiring a valid vaccination record, the airlines would hope to minimize the wanton spread of infectious disease by keeping potential disease carrying individuals off all flights originating and terminating in the United States.
The airlines are using the term at risk individual up to this point to describe who they are targeting, explains the FAA source. I take that to mean individuals who are unvaccinated themselves or those who refuse to vaccinate their children. They (the airlines) realize this is a hot button issue at the moment, however, they allegedly feel this is the only way they can do their part to help keep their customers and employees safe and healthy. One higher up with a major carrier said something to the effect of this is the responsible thing to do.
The FAA source, speaking on condition of anonymity explains that many of the airlines have, had it with the anti-vaccination arguments and dont want to be left with the guilt and partial responsibility when a preventable disease spreads by way of air travel. It is assumed that a valid vaccination record will be required upon check in before travelers embark on their journey. Itll add another step to the flight process, but the airlines, so far, are willing to absorb any costs associated with it, said the FAA source. It is not expected to impact the already beleaguered Transportation Security Administration as this would be an elective requirement and not a federally mandated change.
The 2014 2015 U.S. measles outbreak spread to seven states and is widely believed to have been tied to vacationers at the Disneyland amusement park in Anaheim, California. Many speculate the spread of the disease outside of California was exacerbated due to vacationing families traveling by air. By requiring a valid vaccination record, the airlines would hope to minimize the wanton spread of infectious disease by keeping potential disease carrying individuals off all flights originating and terminating in the United States.
The airlines are using the term at risk individual up to this point to describe who they are targeting, explains the FAA source. I take that to mean individuals who are unvaccinated themselves or those who refuse to vaccinate their children. They (the airlines) realize this is a hot button issue at the moment, however, they allegedly feel this is the only way they can do their part to help keep their customers and employees safe and healthy. One higher up with a major carrier said something to the effect of this is the responsible thing to do.
Um, where would we get this proof?
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Airlines Consider Requiring Proof Of Vaccination For Domestic Air Travel [View all]
KamaAina
Feb 2015
OP
There is a cut-off birthdate, and before that date (I forget the year) they assume that anyone
pnwmom
Feb 2015
#5
For those of us over 60, we can't provide proof because the vaccines didn't exist
Retrograde
Feb 2015
#57
What this probably means is that adults who were younger than a certain cut-off age
pnwmom
Feb 2015
#2
They already recommend adult measles vaccines for adults who can't prove they are fully vaccinated.
pnwmom
Feb 2015
#8
I had all the diseases, my husband is getting measles booster as is younger and we've
uppityperson
Feb 2015
#18
Yet that would not do anything regarding diseases for which there is no vaccination
treestar
Feb 2015
#6
Have you considered the implications of an Autistic driver on the Bay Area freeways?
KamaAina
Feb 2015
#42
Children don't get the MMR till they're over a year old. Are you saying they shouldn't
pnwmom
Feb 2015
#15
Regarding your husband's chicken pox: he can ask for a blood test, but he could also just...
Hekate
Feb 2015
#38
But don't they require it for international flights? So how does HIPAA figure in that?n/t
pnwmom
Feb 2015
#56