Business Standard

WHO TO LAUNCH APP FOR CHECKING COVID SYMPTOMS

- PARESH DAVE

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) plans to launch an app this month to enable people in under-resourced countries to assess whether they may have the novel coronaviru­s, and is considerin­g a Bluetooth-based contact tracing feature too, an official told Reuters on Friday. The app will ask people about their symptoms and offer guidance on whether they may have Covid-19, said Bernardo Mariano, chief informatio­n officer for the WHO.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) plans to launch an app this month to enable people in under-resourced countries to assess whether they may have the novel coronaviru­s, and is considerin­g a Bluetooth-based contact tracing feature too, an official told Reuters on Friday.

The app will ask people about their symptoms and offer guidance on whether they may have COVID-19, the potentiall­y lethal illness caused by the coronaviru­s, said Bernardo Mariano, chief informatio­n officer for the WHO. Other informatio­n, such as how to get tested, will be personalis­ed according to the user’s country.

Though the WHO will release a version on app stores globally, any government will be able to take the app’s underlying technology, add features and release its own version on app stores, Mariano said in a phone interview.

India, Australia and the United Kingdom already have released official virus apps using their own technology, with common features including telling people whether to get tested based on their symptoms and logging people’s movements to enable more efficient contact tracing.

Several countries are ramping up contact tracing, or the process of finding, testing and isolating individual­s who crossed paths with an infectious individual. It is seen as vital to safely opening economies, and apps that automate parts of the process could accelerate efforts.

The WHO expects its app to draw interest in other countries, including some in

South America and Africa where case numbers are rising. They may lack the technology and engineers to develop apps or be struggling to offer testing and education.

“The value is really for countries that do not have anything,” Mariano said. “We would be leaving behind the ones that are not able to (provide an app), that have fragile health systems.”

Engineers and designers, including some who previously worked at Alphabet Inc’s Google and Microsoft Corp, have been volunteeri­ng for weeks to develop the new app with about five of them overseeing the process. They are designing it open-source on the hosting service Github, meaning code is open to public input.

Several team members declined to comment.

Mariano said he wants to include additional tools beyond the symptom checker, including a self-help guide for mental health care.

The team also is considerin­g what the WHO refers to as proximity tracing.

Engineers have done preliminar­y work and talked to smartphone operating system makers Apple Inc and Google about possibly adopting technology the companies plan to release jointly this month to make tracing easier.

 ??  ?? WHO wants to include additional tools beyond the symptom checker, including a self-help guide for mental health care
WHO wants to include additional tools beyond the symptom checker, including a self-help guide for mental health care

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