Coronavirus: Chile to introduce controversial 'virus-free' certificates
Chile's government has said it will go ahead with a controversial plan to issue certificates to people who have recovered from Covid-19.
The documents would be given to people to allow them to return to work, Deputy Health Minister Paula Daza said.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has said there is "no evidence" that people who contract coronavirus are immune from being infected again.
It said certificates could inspire false confidence and help it spread.
Chile has reported 189 virus-related deaths and more than 13,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
"There is currently no evidence that people who have recovered from Covid-19 and have antibodies are protected from a second infection," the WHO said in a briefing note on Friday.
The body argued that so-called "immunity certificates" could even be harmful, because they could lead people to ignore public health advice and therefore increase the risk of transmitting the disease.
- A SIMPLE GUIDE: What are the symptoms?
- ON FRONTLINE: The young doctors being asked to play god
- REASON TO HOPE: The good that may come out of this crisis
- AVOIDING CONTACT: The rules on self-isolation and exercise
- HOPE AND LOSS: Your coronavirus stories
But Ms Daza told reporters on Sunday: "One of the things that we know is that a person who has had the illness has a lower probability of becoming ill again."
She added that the certificates would not confirm that people had immunity to Covid-19, but rather state that they had recovered from the disease and had completed a period of isolation.
At least 200,000 people have died with the coronavirus across the world, and many governments are now trying to find ways to ease their lockdown restrictions.