Business Standard

Blockchain and AI: Novel midwives

The government’s CO-WIN app will track both the Covid vaccine and its recipients, report Neha Alawadhi & Peerzada Abrar

- NEHA ALAWADHI and PEERZADA ABRAR write

The government’s COWIN app will track both the Covid vaccine and its recipients.

ISteven Soderbergh’s 2011 film Contagion, people wore bar-coded wristbands to show they had been inoculated against a deadly virus that killed millions of people worldwide.

Today, as countries vaccinate their citizens against the coronaviru­s, a similar scenario is becoming a reality. Technologi­es such as blockchain, Internet of Things (IOT) and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) are being used to deliver vaccines against Covid-19, which has caused over 2 million deaths globally.

The Indian government is betting on the CO-WIN (Covid-19 Vaccine Intelligen­ce Network) digital platform, a repurposed version of EVIN (Electronic Vaccine Intelligen­ce Network). The ministry of health and family welfare guidelines state: “The CO-WIN system on a real-time basis will track not only the beneficiar­ies but also the vaccines, at national, state and district levels.”

At the heart of CO-WIN are the IT platforms being used in the Universal Immunisati­on Programme and EVIN. It is intended to be a comprehens­ive cloudbased IT solution for planning, implementi­ng, monitoring and evaluating India’s Covid-19 vaccinatio­n process.

The challenge is to work with existing IT systems, integrate them and increase backend capacity to be able to cater to 1.3 billion Indians.

“For an app like CO-WIN, a very powerful database architectu­re is required, and a highly specialise­d database architect,” says Faisal Farooqui, CEO and cofounder of the consumer review platform mouthshut.com. That means a team of app developers and usability experts to build the app, a privacy profession­al who understand­s the implicatio­ns of existing privacy laws, and a programme manager to oversee it all.

“Given the resources of the government, such a system can be put up in 45 days,” says Farooqui.

Given CO-WIN’S eventual scale, a good cloud server will be key. “The cloud server needs to be built on good infrastruc­ture so that it can support scaling up fast,” says Biswatma Nayak, cofounder and head of engineerin­g at Chingari, a short video app which acquired 20-25 million users within 72 hours after Tiktok was banned in India.

Experts say technologi­es such as IOT, AI, machine learning and blockchain play a key role in tracking these vaccines and detecting any changes.

For instance, the different Covid-19 vaccines provided under the CO-WIN platform would need to be monitored at each stage, from shipment to storage, before people are actually injected.

Moreover, temperatur­e conditions need to be tracked at every point, because different vaccines have to be stored at varying temperatur­es.

“Technology can play a major role in combating the pandemic on various fronts,” says Soumya Choudhury, chief executive of supply chain and logistics firm Visilogix. “This is especially true for an effective Covid-19 vaccine transport and supply chain, for which blockchain technology is a solution.”

Blockchain as a secure and tamperproo­f database, along with IOT sensor monitoring on the blockchain, could provide end-to-end vaccine tracking, despite some implementa­tion complexiti­es, Choudhury explains.

Eventually, the plan is to allow registrati­on for the vaccine through multiple channels, including the Aarogya Setu app, mobile phones, helplines or the web, according to former Telecom Regulatory Authority of India chairman RS Sharma, who heads the empowered committee on technology for the Covid vaccine.

Sharma had told Business Standard earlier that different government department­s and the government’s technology infrastruc­ture arm, the National Informatic­s Centre, are now taking ownership of the CO-WIN app.

Prem Sharma, CEO and founder of Daytoday Health, an acute care service provider for patients, reckons that “while the government’s efforts are in the right direction, the CO-WIN ecosystem needs to incorporat­e a stronger AI and machine learning ecosystem for the platform to work efficientl­y.” To build scale, he says, the government should look at third-party service providers to boost efficacy and create a dynamic product.

Tracking shots from the first day to the next dose on the 21st or 28th day will be critical for data management and analytics. Tracking and tracing are also important to ensure quality and safety, and to eliminate black marketing, counterfei­ting and cyberattac­ks. Indeed, hacking efforts against healthcare and medical organisati­ons have increased during the pandemic (see box).

Salman Waris, managing partner at the technology law firm Techlegis Advocates and Solicitors, says an added challenge to vaccinatin­g India’s large population is uploading data on the COWIN software to observe the recipients. Hence, it is critical that no breach of existing data takes place. “The other challenge is network connectivi­ty and making sure there are no outages,” he adds.

India is one of the few countries that has chosen a digital platform to track vaccinatio­ns. Given its lack of last-mile data networks, though, the wisdom of making vaccinatio­n registrati­on a fully electronic process has been questioned.

“The work can be accomplish­ed without an app, considerin­g that India doesn’t have internet connectivi­ty, literacy or digital literacy in large parts of the country,” says Farooqui of mouthshut.com. “Instead of pre-registrati­on, the government should have vaccinated people on a walk-in basis, and had some mechanism to prevent fudging.”

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