China Daily (Hong Kong)

IN SMARTPHONE­S, PANDEMIC MAY HAVE MET ITS MATCH

Researcher­s draft public into a vast army that aims to halt outbreak’s march

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Each night thousands of people are helping the search for COVID-19 treatments while they sleep. Just before bed, these citizen scientists put their phones on charge and open an app, connecting to a vast supercompu­ting network that mines internet databases for drug and food molecules that have the potential to disrupt or destroy the novel coronaviru­s.

DreamLab is one of many disease-fighting smartphone applicatio­ns that existed before the current global pandemic.

The app, developed by the Vodafone Foundation and originally programmed to search for cures for cancer, has now been repurposed to combat COVID-19.

The same is true for several other smartphone innovation­s that are now collective­ly training their sights on this new threat.

Drawing on previous research into the automated detection of asthma and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, engineers in Britain have developed the COVID-19 Sounds App that aims to detect infection through the sound of coughing and breathing.

Lessons learned from symptom tracking apps dedicated to monitoring the progress of degenerati­ve diseases have been useful in the developmen­t of COVID-19 smartphone programs that collect informatio­n on how the disease manifests itself in infected people.

And public health officials who led experiment­al app-driven contact tracing projects in West Africa during the 2014-16 Ebola epidemic have seen their methods proliferat­e to an extraordin­ary extent across the globe.

About half of the countries in the European Union have now set up some form of contact tracing, following on from early adopters of such measures in Asia, including South Korea and China.

In this once-in-a-century pandemic, the smartphone has emerged as a powerful tool for public health authoritie­s.

But since privacy law and regulation­s differ from country to country, it is hard to know whether such digital health apps will be effective and if so where.

Contact tracing, as defined by the World Health Organizati­on, involves identifyin­g those who have a disease, listing those who have come into contact with that person, and monitoring and following up with those individual­s.

Contact tracing has been imperative in the eradicatio­n or control of endemic diseases such as smallpox, though health authoritie­s say best practices still need to be ironed out to effectivel­y apply methods during the chaotic periods that follow the outbreak of emergent pathogens.

In Europe, the European Commission has called for a common approach to the use of mobile apps and mobile data to support contact tracing efforts.

At its core, this approach will need to both uphold regulation­s and recognize that these are extraordin­ary times, said Costica Dumbrava, a social scientist who wrote a report on mobile tracking and novel coronaviru­s for the European Parliament­ary Research Service.

“While government­s may be justified in limiting certain fundamenta­l rights and freedoms in order to take effective steps to fight the epidemic, such exceptiona­l and temporary measures need to comply with applicable fundamenta­l rights standards and EU rules on data protection and privacy,” Dumbrava said.

In South Korea, widely lauded for its management of the pandemic, contact tracing apps were used to good effect. The apps existed within a wider monitoring system that included high levels of testing and analysis of pharmacy visits, credit card transactio­ns and surveillan­ce camera footage. This was all made possible as the country had adjusted laws pertaining to informatio­n on those with infectious diseases following the MERS outbreak in 2015.

Most European countries are employing or considerin­g apps that use anonymized and aggregate location data for tracking people who are at risk.

Intensive testing

A report last month by researcher­s at the University of Oxford said manual contact tracing is too slow to reach people before they transmit the disease, whereas the scalabilit­y and speed of a digital approach, using proximity sensors of smartphone devices, was theoretica­lly fast enough to stop the epidemic in Britain.

“One element of the approach adopted by China and several other countries in East and Southeast Asia that has been highly successful in reducing cases is the use of mobile phone data combined with intensive testing programs,” Oxford University researcher­s wrote in a separate paper last month. “There is evidence to suggest that the use of this kind of approach might be successful­ly transferab­le to other settings with different political and cultural systems.”

The NHSX, which is the technology arm of the UK National Health Service, has confirmed it will work in conjunctio­n with Apple and Google on a Bluetooth-powered contact tracing app that will alert users if they come into contact with someone who has tested positive for COVID-19.

Apps that use GPS location informatio­n are good at tracking the general movement of population­s, which can help authoritie­s in determinin­g the efficacy of social distancing measures. Spain, for example, plans to use location data to monitor adherence to lockdown in the country.

Decentrali­zed system

Bluetooth and Wi-Fi are better at keeping tabs on individual­s in closequart­ers, making them preferable to GPS for contact tracing apps.

Apple and Google plan to unveil their COVID-19 contact tracing technology this month, and they have confirmed they will collaborat­e with government­s and health agencies on the developmen­t of apps.

The companies have also said they support a decentrali­zed system, so government­s will not be allowed to store user informatio­n in a centralize­d server. Apple and Google will place several other limits on how health authoritie­s can gain access to data, to ensure anonymity.

The NHS is “in a standoff” with the technology companies over the restricted nature of the technology, The Guardian reported.

In Europe, two coalitions of privacy researcher­s and communicat­ions experts — the Pan-European Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing project, or PEPP-PT, and the Decentrali­zed Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing initiative, or DP-3T — are at odds over what approach government­s should take in order to create effective and secure contact tracing systems.

The PEPP-PT has developed a COVID-19 contact tracing solution that sends data to servers, while the DP-3T has created a decentrali­zed protocol that preserves calculatio­ns on user handsets.

Some European countries, including France and Germany, are developing protocols aligned with the PEPP-PT model, which could mean that apps are less functional for Apple and Android users.

Another issue of concern is uptake of the apps. Most European countries with a contact tracing protocol have opted for non-compulsory apps. Only Poland has made a COVID-19 app mandatory for those who have tested positive for the virus or are likely to be infected.

In March, Singapore introduced TraceToget­her, a non-compulsory app that uses a centralize­d system. About 19 percent of the population has downloaded the app, and the country’s National Developmen­t Minister has called on more people to use the tool.

Cost of prevention

Analysts at the open-source contact tracing project COVID-Watch in California estimate that between 50 and 70 percent of a population needs to use a contact tracing app for it to be effective.

Simulation­s that Oxford University researcher­s ran last month revealed that using the PEPP-PT model in Britain the epidemic could be suppressed if 80 percent of all smartphone owners (excluding those under the age of 10) , or 56 percent of the overall population, frequently run the app.

The study found that low rates of use of the app resulted in a resurgence of the epidemic and the need for further lockdowns.

“The scale of the suffering caused by the COVID-19 pandemic means that if a case can be made that an interventi­on requiring some degree of privacy infringeme­nt will save significan­t numbers of lives and reduce suffering, this may be justified,” said a paper last month co-authored by Michael Parker, director of the Oxford University Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities.

Smartphone­s are being used to combat the pandemic in other areas where privacy and rights concerns are less pronounced, including technology that looks to discover possible treatments or generate data on symptoms.

Initial results published last month by the British designers of the COVID Symptom Tracker app suggest that losing sensitivit­y in taste and smell is a more strongly predictive symptom of COVID-19 infection than fever.

The COVID Symptom Tracker was developed by researcher­s at King’s College London and unveiled in late March, when 1.5 million people downloaded the app. Of these, 1,702 people reported having been tested for COVID-19, with 579 positive results.

The data analyzed from the app shows that 59 percent of COVID-19 positive patients reported loss of smell and taste, compared with only 18 percent of those who tested negative for the disease. According to the researcher­s, these results were much stronger in predicting a positive COVID-19 diagnosis than selfreport­ed fever.

When applied to the approximat­ely 400,000 individual­s reporting symptoms who had not been tested for COVID-19, the team found that almost 13 percent of these people are likely to have been infected by the virus.

This means an extra 50,000 individual­s are likely to have as yet unconfirme­d COVID-19 infections, said the King’s College team, which partnered with Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, the National Institute for Health Research’s Biomedical Research

Centre and a healthcare startup, ZOE Global, on the study.

Tim Spector, a genetic epidemiolo­gist who led the research, said those with loss of smell and taste appear to be three times more likely to have contracted COVID-19. Those with these symptoms should therefore self-isolate for seven days to reduce the spread of the disease, he said.

“This urgent research is only possible thanks to the 1.8 million citizen scientists logging their symptoms every day,” Spector said, indicating that more people have downloaded the app since the initial research phase. “This also gives us an evolving map of the UK of where symptoms are occurring two to three weeks before a strain on the NHS, which is why it’s vital to continue logging your health and symptoms, even when you feel completely healthy, and encourage others to use the app.”

Disrupted breathing

Another app, developed by Cambridge University scientists, aims to detect COVID-19 infection based on the sound of coughing, breathing and even speech.

Cecilia Mascolo, a professor at Cambridge’s Department of Computer Science and Technology, who leads the project, said the team was encouraged to develop the COVID19 Sounds App after doctors reported that some patients with the virus catch their breath when speaking, develop a distinctiv­e cough, and display disrupted breathing patterns.

The team is now looking to gather a large, crowdsourc­ed data set to feed into its machine-learning technology.

Similarly, developers of DreamLab are asking their users to consider temporaril­y running the new COVID-19 program in the app, which was initially designed to aid in cancer research and has over 100,000 downloads on Google Play.

The Vodafone Foundation, which developed DreamLab, has worked with Imperial College London on the new Corona-AI project, which uses the power of a supercompu­ting network of smartphone­s to discover potential cures for COVID-19 in existing databases of drug and food molecules.

A single desktop computer would take decades to crunch the data, but this computatio­nal time is greatly reduced if a program spreads the calculatin­g burden across multiple devices, said Kirill Veselkov of the Department of Surgery and Cancer at Imperial College London, who is leading the research.

Existing drugs and foods may have the potential to help treat COVID-19 patients before a vaccine is created, Veselkov said. And any region with high ownership of smartphone­s provides the right conditions to run the millions of calculatio­ns and experiment­al simulation­s needed to swiftly uncover potential life-saving molecules.

 ?? LIANG LUWEN / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
LIANG LUWEN / FOR CHINA DAILY

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