Orlando Sentinel

Virginia offers pandemic app from Apple, Google

Feature notifies people of possible exposures to virus

- By Matt O’Brien and Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia has rolled out a smartphone app to automatica­lly notify people if they might have been exposed to the coronaviru­s, becoming the first U.S. state to use new pandemic technology created by Apple and Google.

The free Covidwise app is available in Apple and Android app stores as of Wednesday. State officials, who emphasized that the app doesn’t track user location or collect personal informatio­n, announced public campaigns encouragin­g people to download and use it.

“We’re using every possible approach to fight this virus and keep Virginians healthy,” Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam said in a statement.

The technology arrives nearly four months after Apple and Google partnered to create the software for public health agencies trying to contain the spread of the pandemic. Canada and a number of European countries have already rolled out apps using the tech companies’ framework.

The app, developed by SpringML, relies on Bluetooth wireless technology to detect when someone who downloaded the app has spent time near another app user who later tests positive for the virus.

Those who test positive can anonymousl­y notify others to help stop the spread of COVID-19.

The Virginia health department will verify positive test results and issue app users who want to report them a personal identifica­tion number tied to their lab records in order to prevent malicious actors from sharing false positives.

“Your device will share anonymous tokens via Bluetooth with other COVIDWISE users,” the app says. “If another user you’ve been nearby tests positive for COVID-19 within a 14-day period, your app will notify you.”

People who receive a warning of possible exposure can seek advice from the health department or their doctor.

Informatio­n on Virginia’s public health department website says the app measures close contact as within 6 feet of someone for at least 15 minutes, using guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For example, if there are two students in adjacent dorm rooms with a wall between them, the health department says the wall would be expected to diminish the signal strength between devices but a notificati­on might still be triggered depending on the compositio­n of the wall.

A number of states have expressed interest in the Apple-Google technology, including Alabama — which has begun pilot testing — South Carolina, North Dakota and Pennsylvan­ia.

“Everyone is trying so hard, and there’s limited time, limited capacity,” said Sameer Halia, who is working to launch an app in Arizona using the Google and Apple software. “Every state will look at what their needs are and what their population cares about and make a decision.”

Several states have introduced apps using other approaches, such as satelliteb­ased GPS location tracking, but there’s little evidence they have been successful.

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