27 September 2023

Tracing apps: Low numbers may not be a problem

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Patrick Howell O’Neill* says a new study has found that COVID-19 tracing apps can still save lives even with low adoption rates.


Here’s a life-or-death question: Do apps that notify people of potential exposure to the coronavirus help save lives, or are they a waste of precious time and money?

A new study from Oxford University and Google says contact tracing apps reduce infections, hospitalisations, and deaths at almost any level of adoption, showing that the technology can act as a complement to other countermeasures like social distancing and manual contact tracing.

“The key message from the study is that digital contact tracing is part of an intervention package,” says study coauthor Rob Hinch, a senior researcher at Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Medicine.

“Even at low uptake, it can make significant contributions. It’s important to see it as a key pillar of a larger intervention package.”

Adoption of digital contact tracing and exposure notification is becoming a lot easier: Apple and Google recently announced that health agencies can use their iPhone and Android coronavirus technology without creating specific apps.

iPhone users need only to tap the screen to join the effort, and Android automatically generates apps, a shift that is meant to drive adoption higher—and a goal that Oxford researchers say can have a meaningful impact on coronavirus infection rates.

The Oxford study has not yet been peer reviewed.

Armed with months of new pandemic data as well as a better understanding of Apple and Google’s Exposure Notification System, the researchers modelled three counties in Washington state.

They ran simulations to estimate the impact if digital exposure notification tools were adopted by anywhere from a 15 per cent of the population to 75 per cent—which would mean that effectively all smartphone users were using the system.

The models showed that if 75 per cent of people used an app, it could help reduce deaths by up to 78 per cent and infections by 81 per cent.

But even a 15 per cent adoption rate can mean 11.8 per cent fewer deaths and 15 per cent fewer infections.

Over the course of the 300-day model, this represented thousands of lives saved.

The authors hope that the models can bring some clarity to the role of technology in fighting the pandemic.

In the 10 months since covid-19 first appeared, there have been dozens of technological solutions proposed to fight the disease, but very little understanding of how—or even if—any of the novel approaches could work.

Earlier studies about digital contact tracing have been widely distorted.

A misunderstanding of a previous Oxford study in April 2020 led many to believe that 60 per cent adoption of digital contact tracing apps is required before they can have any effect.

Since no country had achieved that adoption rate, many members of the public assumed all the apps were failures.

In fact, the April study concludes the opposite: even small levels of adoption can save lives when combined with other prevention and containment measures such as social distancing, quick and effective testing, shutdowns, and medical treatment.

Recent research from University College London came to similar conclusions: digital tools are effective when complementing other countermeasures.

Countries like Ireland and Germany consider their digital contact tracing tools to be successes.

Both likely fall short of 60 per cent adoption, but they are measuring success by broken infection chains and lives saved.

“We’re really pleased to see that contact tracing apps in the UK and the USA have the potential to meaningfully reduce the number of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths at all levels of app uptake across the population,” says Christophe Fraser from the Department of Health at Oxford.

The new study also examined the impact of manual contact tracing.

It concluded, like previous studies, that the most effective strategy is to combine interventions.

Digital and manual contact tracing work best together when complementing social distancing.

The result can be fewer quarantines and the chance to safely reopen society faster.

*Patrick Howell O’Neill is a cybersecurity journalist focused on topics ranging from national security to personal privacy.

This article first appeared at technologyreview.com

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