Returning OFWs' vaccination cards must undergo POLO validation--Bello
Overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) who have been fully inoculated abroad from the coronavius disease (COVID-19) should have their vaccination cards validated by the Philippine Overseas Labor Office (POLO) before coming back to the Philippines.

Thus, said Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) Secretary Silvestre Bello III in a statement Tuesday, July 6.
Citing Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) Resolution No.123-C, item no. 3(ii), Bello said OFWs who received full vaccination in countries or jurisdictions outside the Philippines must have their official documentation of complete vaccination or their International Certificate of Vaccination validated through the POLO.
Apart from the vaccine card or any document showing proof of vaccination, returning OFWs must also present their valid passport or travel document and verified employment contract to the POLO offices in their host country.
The application for validation must be made online via ONEHEALTHPASS PORTAL, which is accessible at https://www.onehealthpass.com.oh/e-HDC/.
Under DOLE Department Order No.226 series of 2021, the OFWs considered as “fully vaccinated” are the “individuals who received more than or equal to two weeks after having received the second dose of COVID-19 vaccine in two-dose series; or more than or equal to two weeks after having received a single-dose vaccine.”
"Vaccines administered to individuals must also be included in any of the Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) List of Compassionate Special Permit issued by the Philippine Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or Emergency Use Listing of the World Health Organization (WHO)," tne statement from DOLE read.
Earlier, the IATF through Resolution Nos.123-C and 124-A, Series 2021 approved the implementation of a shortened facility-based quarantine for inbound, fully vaccinated Filipinos.
This includes OFWs who stayed exclusively in “green” countries or jurisdictions 14 days before their arrival in the Philippines, effective July 1, 2021.
The Department of Health (DOH) had classified green countries or jurisdictions as "low risk" based on IATF evaluation.