Los Angeles Times

What you need to know about state’s contact tracing app

- By Suhauna Hussain Times staff writer John Myers contribute­d to this report.

Beginning Thursday, California­ns will have the option to receive smartphone notificati­ons if they’ve been exposed to someone who has tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s.

California on Monday announced the public rollout of an app to support the state’s COVID- 19 contact tracing efforts. Called CA Notify, the app relies on a tech framework created by Apple and Google that uses Apple and Android phones’ shortrange Bluetooth radios to determine when two devices have been near one another for more than 15 minutes.

The tool arrives seven months after the tech giants released the digital interface and Gov. Gavin Newsom said it would be key to supporting California’s contact tracing efforts.

It comes as California’s coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations have surged past 10,000, making this wave of infections the largest to date.

“This holds a lot of promise,” Newsom said at a news conference Monday. “The more people that participat­e in it, the more that opt in, the more effective this program can be.”

However, Newsom said he didn’t want to “overstate” the utility of the app: In order for it to have a profound effect, many California­ns would need to use it.

Here’s what you need to know:

How does it work?

When users of the app test positive for COVID- 19, they will receive a text notif ication from the California Department of Public Health with a code to input.

Those whose phones have been in proximity to the phone of the infected person within the previous two weeks will receive exposure alerts.

The idea is to identify exposed individual­s early, allowing them to quickly quarantine. In a pilot program involving an estimated 250,000 students, staff and faculty at

seven UC campuses earlier this fall, the system proved effective, Dr. Christophe­r Longhurst, chief informatio­n officer at UC San Diego Health, said in a statement.

Tech companies, California officials and health experts point out these types of tools are no substitute for other measures to prevent transmissi­on, including distancing, mask- wearing and interview- based contact tracing.

Can I opt out of using the app?

Yes. Use of the app is voluntary.

Newsom underscore­d this point in Monday’s news conference, aiming to get out ahead of privacy concerns that could deter use of the platform.

“It’s 100% private, 100% secure, 100% voluntary. You opt in, or you choose not to,” he said.

What are the privacy implicatio­ns?

Minimal. Safeguards proposed by Apple and Google won cautious approval from privacy advocates such as the American Civil Liberties Union ( though it remains skeptical overall of the need to use apps for exposure notificati­on.)

Data stay anonymous because mobile devices in proximity to one another only exchange randomly generated strings of numbers — keys that rotate frequently to prevent tracking a device over time. Data are stored on the user’s device only 14 days, after which the informatio­n is automatica­lly deleted.

Has the technology worked in other states?

In the dozen- plus states where the technology has been available so far, getting enough people to sign up has posed a huge hurdle.

Preliminar­y research by a team at Oxford University’s Nuffield Department of Medicine projected that 15% uptake of an exposure notif ication system in Washington state ( combined with manual contact tracing efforts) could reduce infections by 15% and deaths by 11%.

Data from Nevada show how tough it is to reach that level of adoption. On Aug. 24, Nevada’s Department of Health and Human Services launched exposure notificati­on app COVID Trace to its 3 million- plus residents. By Nov. 9, the app had been downloaded less than 70,000 times — just under 3% of the state’s adult population, according to Time magazine.

How can I activate the CA Notify app?

California­ns with Android phones must download the app from the Google Play store once it’s available Thursday, and check to make sure their device’s Bluetooth is on.

Users of iPhones running iOS version 13.7 or later can enable notificati­ons without downloadin­g anything by opening “Settings,” scrolling down to “Exposure Notif ications,” selecting “Turn On” and setting California as the location.

 ?? Olivier Douliery AFP vi a Getty I mages ?? CALIFORNIA’S new voluntary contact tracing app, CA Notify, can be downloaded beginning Thursday.
Olivier Douliery AFP vi a Getty I mages CALIFORNIA’S new voluntary contact tracing app, CA Notify, can be downloaded beginning Thursday.

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