At your first vaccine appointment, you will receive a vaccination card that states which vaccine you received, the date you received it and the location. Here's why it's important to hold onto your ...
If you get the COVID-19 vaccine, you also get an important souvenir, a vaccine card. But what happens if you lose it? The two-shot COVID-19 vaccine requires people to wait three to four weeks between ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Illustration by Victoria Ellis for Yahoo News; photo: Getty Images Because COVID-19 vaccines are no longer being distributed by ...
If you got the vaccine at a major pharmacy or retailer, call them. They keep electronic records for all the vaccines they’ve given. As long as you have your ID, you should be good to go. For example, ...
It's the end of an era for a once-critical pandemic document: The ubiquitous white COVID-19 vaccination cards are being phased out. Now that COVID-19 vaccines are not being distributed by the federal ...
So long, COVID vaccine cards. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is no longer printing or distributing cards showing a person’s history of COVID-19 vaccinations. People receiving the shots ...
It's safe to consider your COVID-19 vaccination card a relic. Once a pandemic staple, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it will no longer distribute the vaccine cards to those ...
As new COVID vaccines roll out in New York, you might be wondering whether you need to bring your original COVID-19 vaccine card to your appointment. Maybe you've lost your card, or it is damaged from ...
Because COVID-19 vaccines are no longer being distributed by the federal government, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has stopped printing those little white vaccine cards that were once ...
FILE - A nurse practitioner holds a COVID-19 vaccine card at a New York Health and Hospitals vaccine clinic in the Brooklyn borough of New York on Jan. 10, 2021. Now that COVID-19 vaccines are being ...