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WHO and Partners Launch Digital Health Wallets for ASEAN

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Published March 23rd, 2026
Detected March 23rd, 2026
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Summary

The WHO, in partnership with the Temasek Foundation, has launched a three-year initiative to help ASEAN Member States transition from paper-based health records to digital health wallets. This program aims to strengthen national health systems and improve continuity of care by providing trusted, portable access to essential health information.

What changed

The World Health Organization (WHO) and its partners, including the Temasek Foundation, have initiated a three-year program to assist ASEAN Member States in adopting digital health wallets (DHWs). This initiative seeks to replace paper-based health records with secure, interoperable digital systems, thereby enhancing national health systems, ensuring continuity of care, and providing individuals with reliable access to their health information. The program aligns with the International Health Regulations (IHR 2025) and will leverage WHO's Global Digital Health Certification Network for cryptographic verification. Initial implementation will focus on digital International Certificates of Vaccination or Prophylaxis, with subsequent expansion to routine immunizations and maternal/child health records.

Regulated entities, particularly government health agencies in ASEAN countries, should prepare for the adoption of these digital health wallets. The program involves technical guidance, capacity building, and support for integrating DHWs into national health information systems, emphasizing global interoperability standards like HL7 FHIR and the International Patient Summary. While this is a non-binding initiative focused on guidance and capacity building, countries are encouraged to adopt these standards to improve health service delivery and build resilient health systems. The initiative aims to demonstrate the benefits of trusted digital tools for strengthening health systems and improving patient care across the region.

What to do next

  1. Assess national health information system readiness for DHW integration
  2. Plan for the deployment of digital health wallets, starting with vaccination certificates
  3. Adopt global interoperability standards such as HL7 FHIR and International Patient Summary

Source document (simplified)

WHO / Ploy Phutpheng
People queue and present documents at the Tak Immigration Checkpoint for outbound border processing. © Credits

WHO and partners launch new initiative to expand use of digital health wallets

23 March 2026 Departmental update Reading time:
The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research, in partnership with the Temasek Foundation, have launched a new three-year initiative to help Member States of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) transition from paper-based health records to secure, interoperable digital health wallets (DHWs). The programme aims to strengthen national health systems, improve continuity of care and ensure individuals have trusted, portable access to their essential health information.

“The COVID-19 pandemic showed how important it is for health records to be trusted, verifiable and able to travel with people across borders,” said Mr Kee Kirk Chuen, Head of  Health & Well-being at the Temasek Foundation. “Through our partnership with WHO, the Temasek Foundation hopes to support countries in moving from fragmented paper records to secure Digital Health Wallets that individuals can carry with them wherever they go. By testing this approach in pilot ASEAN Member States we aim to demonstrate how trusted digital tools can strengthen health systems, improve continuity of care – including for families and children – and build the local capabilities needed for governments to scale these systems nationally. If successful, this effort can help turn global digital health standards into practical solutions that benefit communities across the region.” –

The initiative builds on lessons from the COVID‑19 pandemic, which demonstrated the urgency of reliable, verifiable digital health documentation. It also aligns with the International Health Regulations (IHR 2025), which call for globally recognized digital health certificates. The move from paper-based tools – such as the traditional “Yellow Card” or child health booklets – to digital wallets will help reduce administrative gaps, prevent the use of forged documents and ensure that people’s records follow them across borders and between providers. Digital health wallets supported through this initiative will use cryptographic verification via WHO’s Global Digital Health Certification Network (GDHCN), ensuring records are secure, trustworthy and interoperable. Countries will begin with digital International Certificates of Vaccination or Prophylaxis before expanding to routine immunization, maternal and child health records and, eventually, broader personal health summaries.

“Digital health wallets are more than a technological upgrade – they are a commitment to building trusted, people-centred health systems,” said Dr Alain Labrique, Director of the Data, Digital Health, Analytics and AI Department at WHO. “By supporting countries in adopting secure, interoperable solutions, we ensure that individuals can carry their essential health information with confidence and dignity. This partnership reflects our shared belief that digital transformation must strengthen national capacity, uphold equity, and provide the foundation for resilient health systems.”

The programme takes a comprehensive approach, strengthening national systems through technical guidance, shared digital public infrastructure, capacity building and targeted implementation support. Countries will receive assistance to assess readiness, plan deployment, and integrate new wallet functionalities into national health information systems. A key component is the adoption of global interoperability standards, including HL7 FHIR® and the International Patient Summary, helping ensure that data can move safely and consistently across systems. Pilot activities will generate practical insights into how DHWs can improve service delivery, including for mothers, children and travellers in ASEAN member states. Each engaged country will also conduct policy and implementation research, building national capacity and supporting wider regional learning.

“Digital health interventions only become solutions when successfully integrated into existing health systems based on a nuanced understanding of local realities,” said Dr Kumanan Rasanathan, Executive Director, Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research. “The Alliance is delighted to support digital health wallets by facilitating learning across the partner countries to inform implementation in each specific context.”

By the end of the programme, the DHWs will have been piloted in each country and the results documented as a replicable model for other countries in the region.

The initiative will also produce global guidance to help other countries adopt secure, standards-based digital health wallets, contributing to stronger, more resilient health systems across the region and beyond.

Related

Global Digital Health Certification Network Strengthening the Global Ecosystem for Paediatric Medicines: Leadership, Collaboration & Impact WHA78: Ecosystem for Paediatric Medicines Progress | MPP

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
WHO
Published
March 23rd, 2026
Instrument
Guidance
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Healthcare providers
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers 9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Health Record Management Digital Health Certification
Geographic scope
European Union EU

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Public Health International Health Regulations Digital Health

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