Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

WE KNOW HOW TO HELP CONTROL COVID- 19’ S SPREAD ONCE WE LEAVE HOME; WE JUST HAVE TO DO IT

- ED ZOTTI The trends shaping Chicago, the decisions we must make

As Chicago and other big cities make plans for emerging from pandemicin­duced cocooning, we face a simple decision.

We can give up a measure of personal choice and get the coronaviru­s under control reasonably quickly. Or we can refuse to make common- sense accommodat­ions and then face recurring outbreaks for years.

Much of the developed world has chosen the first option. The United States is quite capable of choosing the second.

I’ve spent the past few weeks speaking with business leaders, government officials, medical experts and technologi­sts about what it’ll take to put the pandemic behind us. My takeaways:

◆ There’s no consensus on how to proceed. But there’s strong interest in developing a coordinate­d approach.

◆ The federal government is never going to come up with a national scheme. Any solution will have to be regional. The private sector will be the major driver.

◆ Decision- makers are aware of what needs to be done, based on what has worked in Asia. The five tools, as one business person put it, are social distancing, personal protective equipment, testing, taking temperatur­es and contact tracing.

◆ Of the five, the first four at best will reduce risk. Contact tracing — tracking down and treating as many people as possible who’ve crossed paths with someone infected — is the one proven way to end a pandemic short of the vaccine that we don’t yet have.

◆ Given how easily COVID- 19 spreads, effective large- scale contact tracing will require technology. Older solutions, such as the neighborho­od- alert system used in South Korea, involve a risk of privacy loss. That’s less of a problem with newer technology. The sticking point is that participat­ion has to be mandatory for contact tracing to work.

◆ Some will bitterly resist the compulsory aspect, even if it means just using an ID card to enter a building or ride a bus. Getting buy- in will take a long, fraught public conversati­on.

What digital contact tracing might look like in this country, no one knows. I’ve touted mobile apps using Bluetooth and GPS technology, but it’s become apparent the voluntary adoption rate for these apps is too low to be effective, and mandating them isn’t in the cards.

A more promising route might be tinkering with existing technology.

Since 9/ 11, many office buildings and tenants have implemente­d some form of access control. More- advanced systems require tapping a card to open a door or summon an elevator. The taps are logged, making it possible to trace someone’s path through a building.

That technology could be adapted for contact tracing. If an infected party rode elevator A to floor B, those who potentiall­y crossed paths with that person could be notified without troubling everybody else.

The early adopters of tracing technology would be big companies with many employees and deep pockets. The workers already have ID cards.

The idea might catch on with smaller businesses. Operators of restaurant­s, bars and music clubs might band together to offer a nightlife access card as a security measure for their patrons. You’d tap the card on arriving to ensure you’d be notified if a fellow customer later tested positive.

Mass transit is especially challengin­g. Despite precaution­s such as rear- door bus boarding and longer trains to minimize crowding, six- foot social distancing isn’t practical. So riders who’ve abandoned the system won’t be easily coaxed back.

Electronic fare cards such as Ventra offer a possible solution. Ventra tracks when and where each card is used to pay the fare on entering a CTA bus or an L station. Cards can be registered to users, so the system’s well suited to contact tracing if the CTA chooses to do so.

Some businesses have decided contact tracing is in their interest. Rob Armstrong of Zebra Technologi­es in Lincolnshi­re, which makes handheld data- capture devices used in retail and warehouses, says the company developed contact- tracing software for its products in response to demand from clients who want to protect their workers.

The pandemic will accelerate adoption of digital medical technology. Contact tracing might be carried along in that tide.

“We’ll be five years ahead of where we would have been had COVID not happened,” says Gary Conkright, chief executive office of PhysIQ, a Chicago provider of wearable sensor technology that could be used for remote monitoring of coronaviru­s symptoms.

We know what to do. We just need to suck it up and do it.

 ?? AP ?? Given how easily COVID- 19 spreads, large- scale contact tracing will require technology, writes Ed Zotti. Older solutions, such as a neighborho­od- alert system used in South Korea, involve a risk of privacy loss. That’s less of a problem with newer technology.
AP Given how easily COVID- 19 spreads, large- scale contact tracing will require technology, writes Ed Zotti. Older solutions, such as a neighborho­od- alert system used in South Korea, involve a risk of privacy loss. That’s less of a problem with newer technology.
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