Don’t miss warnings from COVID-19 apps
Fewer than half of states offer phone notifications
Six months after the arrival of the first COVID-19-warning smartphone apps built on a privacy-preserving framework from Apple and Google, they remain yet another coronavirus pandemic scarcity.
Fewer than half of U.S. states offer Android and iOS tools for the “exposure notification” system the two companies announced last April, which estimate other people’s proximity via anonymous Bluetooth beacons sent from phones with the same software.
Most people in participating states have yet to activate these apps. Those who do opt in and then test positive for the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 must opt in again by entering a doctor-provided verification code into their apps.
That second voluntary step generates anonymous warnings to other app users who got close enough to the positive user for long enough – again, as approximated from Bluetooth signals, not pinned down via GPS – to risk infection and to need a COVID-19 test.
So if your copy of one of these apps has remained silent, you’re not alone.
“Nobody in my circle has gotten the phone alert,” said Jeffrey Kahn, director of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics in Baltimore and editor of a 2020 book on the ethics of digital contact tracing.
But, he added, it’s too soon to grade the Android and iOS releases of 23 states – Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan , Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming – plus the District of Columbia and Guam.
One reason: Some obstacles have been plowed through only recently. Consider Virginia’s COVIDWISE, the first such app in the U.S.
● Four months after its August release, the Virginia Department of Health switched to using a national server run by the Association of Public Health Laboratories that lets it work with other state systems. That Silver Spring, Maryland, organization says every U.S. app now uses this nationwide network aside from Guam’s.
● At the end of January, VDH launched an automated system to provide verification codes after a positive test. That helped increase reports through the app by about a third, spokeswoman Melissa Gordon said; from Feb. 11 to Feb. 22, they rose from 2,396 to 3,205.
● On Feb. 2, VDH adopted Apple’s “Express” framework, which lets iPhone users opt in by changing system settings instead of installing an app. That has almost doubled adoption of this system, adding some 890,027 Express activations to 1,007,584 app downloads as of Feb. 22.
“This equates to approximately 45% of our target population (80% of all 18to 65-year-olds in Virginia) or more than one of five (22%) of all Virginians,” Gordon said, adding that the state’s system now has sent 22,508 exposure-notification warnings.
The highest adoption by a state appears to be the one-third uptake that Connecticut touted in January. A study by Oxford University and Google researchers released in September found that adoption by just 15%, combined with traditional contact tracing, could lower infections by 15%.
Meanwhile, until recently, case numbers were too high to make contact tracing all that helpful. “When there’s very widespread community infection, the information is too far behind the spread,” Kahn said.
As vaccinations march on and case numbers continue to drop, that may open up a new opportunity for these apps to help.
It also offers a chance for publichealth experts to learn further from this experience – and to rethink such decisions as leaving development of these apps to individual states.
“This is not the last time we’re going to see a pandemic virus,” Kahn said. “Let’s try to figure out what will work the next time.”