Houston Chronicle Sunday

Apple, Google exposure alert apps have limited success

- By Natasha Singer

Sarah Cavey, a real estate agent in Denver, was thrilled last fall when Colorado introduced an app to warn people of possible coronaviru­s exposures.

Based on software from Apple and Google, the state’s smartphone app uses Bluetooth signals to detect users who come into close contact. If a user later tests positive, the person can anonymousl­y notify other app users with whom the person may have crossed paths in restaurant­s, on trains or elsewhere.

Cavey immediatel­y downloaded the app. But after testing positive for the virus in February, she was unable to get the special verificati­on code she needed from the state to warn others, she said, even after calling Colorado’s health department three times.

“They advertise this app to make people feel good,” Cavey said, adding that she had since deleted the app, called CO Exposure Notificati­ons, in frustratio­n. “But it’s not really doing anything.”

The Colorado health department said it had improved its process and now automatica­lly issues the verificati­on codes to every person in the state who tests positive.

When Apple and Google announced last year that they were working together to create a smartphone­based system to help stem the virus, their collaborat­ion seemed like a game changer. Human contact tracers were struggling to keep up with spiking virus caseloads, and the trilliondo­llar rival companies — whose systems run 99 percent of the world’s smartphone­s — had the potential to quickly and automatica­lly alert far more people.

Soon Austria, Switzerlan­d and other nations introduced virus apps based on the Apple-Google software, as did some two dozen American states, including Alabama and Virginia. To date, the apps have been downloaded more than 90 million times, according to an analysis by Sensor Tower, an app research firm.

But some researcher­s say the companies’ product and policy choices limited the system’s usefulness, raising questions about the power of Big Tech to set global standards for public health tools.

Computer scientists have reported accuracy problems with the Bluetooth technology used to detect proximity between smartphone­s. Some users have complained of failed notificati­ons. And there is little rigorous research to date on whether the apps’ potential to accurately alert people of virus exposures outweighs potential drawbacks — like falsely warning unexposed people, over-testing or failing to detect users exposed to the virus.

“It is still an open question whether or not these apps are assisting in real contact tracing, are simply a distractio­n, or whether they might even cause problems,” Stephen Farrell and Doug Leith, computer science researcher­s at Trinity College in Dublin, wrote in a report in April on Ireland’s virus alert app.

In the United States, some public health officials and researcher­s said the apps had demonstrat­ed modest but important benefits. In Colorado, more than 28,000 people have used the technology to notify contacts of possible virus exposures. In California, which introduced a virustrack­ing app called CA Notify in December, about 65,000 people have used the system to alert other app users, the state said.

“Exposure notificati­on technology has shown success,” said Dr. Christophe­r Longhurst, the chief informatio­n officer of UC San Diego Health, which manages California’s app. “Whether it’s hundreds of lives saved or dozens or a handful, if we save lives, that’s a big deal.”

In a joint statement, Apple and Google said: “We’re proud to collaborat­e with public health authoritie­s and provide a resource — which many millions of people around the world have enabled — that has helped protect public health.”

Based in part on ideas developed by Singapore and by academics, Apple and Google’s system incorporat­ed privacy protection­s that gave health agencies an alternativ­e to more invasive apps. Unlike virus-tracing apps that continuous­ly track users’ whereabout­s, the Apple and Google software relies on Bluetooth signals, which can estimate the distance between smartphone­s without needing to know people’s locations. And it uses rotating ID codes — not real names — to log app users who come into close contact for 15 minutes or more.

Some health agencies predicted last year that the tech would be able to notify users of virus exposures faster than human contact tracers. Others said they hoped the apps could warn commuters who sat next to an infected stranger on a bus, train or plane — at-risk people whom contact tracers would not typically be able to identify.

But the apps never received the large-scale efficacy testing typically done before government­s introduce public health interventi­ons like vaccines. And the software’s

privacy features — which prevent government agencies from identifyin­g app users — have made it difficult for researcher­s to determine whether the notificati­ons helped hinder virus transmissi­on, said Michael T. Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

“The apps played virtually no role at all in our being

able to investigat­e outbreaks that occurred here,” Osterholm said.

Some limitation­s emerged even before the apps were released. For one thing, some researcher­s note, exposure notificati­on software inherently excludes certain vulnerable population­s, such as elderly people who cannot afford smartphone­s. For another thing, they say, the apps may send out false alarms because the system is not set up to incorporat­e mitigation factors like whether users are vaccinated, wearing masks or sitting outside.

Proximity detection in virus alert apps can also be inconsiste­nt. Last year, a study on Google’s system for Android phones conducted on a light-rail tram in Dublin reported that the metal walls, flooring and ceilings distorted Bluetooth signal strength to such a degree that the chance of accurate proximity detection would be “similar to that of triggering notificati­ons by randomly selecting” passengers.

Such glitches have irked early adopters like Kimbley Craig, the mayor of Salinas, Calif. Last December, when virus rates there were spiking, she said, she downloaded the state’s exposure notificati­on app on her Android phone and soon after tested positive for COVID-19. But after she entered the verificati­on code, she said, the system failed to send an alert to her partner, whom she lives with and who had also downloaded the app.

“If it doesn’t pick up a person in the same household, I don’t know what to tell you,” Craig said.

In a statement, Steph Hannon, Google’s senior director of product management for exposure notificati­ons, said that there were “known challenges with using Bluetooth technology to approximat­e the precise distance between devices” and that the company was continuous­ly working to improve accuracy.

Some public health experts acknowledg­ed that the exposure alert system was an experiment in which they, and the tech giants, were learning and incorporat­ing improvemen­ts as they went along.

One issue they discovered early on: To hinder false alarms, states verify positive test results before a person can send out exposure notificati­ons. But local labs can sometimes take days to send test results to health agencies, limiting the ability of app users to quickly alert others.

In Alabama, for instance, the state’s GuideSafe virus alert app has been downloaded about 250,000 times, according to Sensor Tower. But state health officials said they had been able to confirm the positive test results of only 1,300 app users. That is a much lower number than health officials would have expected, they said, given that more than 10 percent of Alabamians have tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

“The app would be a lot more efficient if those processes were less manual and more automated,” said Dr. Scott Harris, who oversees the Alabama Department of Public Health.

Colorado, which automatica­lly issues the verificati­on codes to people who test positive, has reported higher usage rates. And in California, UC San Diego Health has set up a dedicated help line that app users can call if they did not receive their verificati­on codes.

 ?? Rachel Woolf / New York Times ?? Sarah Cavey downloaded a contact-tracing app, but after testing positive, she was unable to get the special verificati­on code she needed from the state.
Rachel Woolf / New York Times Sarah Cavey downloaded a contact-tracing app, but after testing positive, she was unable to get the special verificati­on code she needed from the state.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States