Covid Trackers Are Wheezing in Europe

October 19, 2020

COVID-19 continues to roar across the world. Health professionals and technologists have combined their intellects attempting to provide tools to the public. The Star Tribune explains how Europe wanted to use apps to track the virus: “As Europe Faces 2nd Wave Of Virus, Tracing Apps Lack Impact.”

Europe planned that mobile apps tracking where infected COVID-19 individuals are located would be integral to battling the virus. As 2020 nears the end, the apps have failed because of privacy concerns, lack of public interest, and technical problems. The latter is not a surprise given the demand for a rush job. The apps were supposed to notify people when they were near infected people.

Health professionals predicted that 60% of European country populations would download and use the apps, but adoption rates are low. The Finnish, however, reacted positively and one-third of the country downloaded their country’s specific COVID-19 tracking app. Finland’s population ironically resists wearing masks in public.

The apps keep infected people’s identities secret. Their data remains anonymous and the apps only alert others if they come in contact with a virus carrier. If the information provides any help to medical professionals remains to be seen:

“We might never know for sure, said Stephen Farrell, a computer scientist at Trinity College Dublin who has studied tracing apps. That’s because most apps don’t require contact information from users, without which health authorities can’t follow up. That means it’s hard to assess how many contacts are being picked up only through apps, how their positive test rates compare with the average, and how many people who are being identified anyway are getting tested sooner and how quickly. ‘I’m not aware of any health authority measuring and publishing information about those things, and indeed they are likely hard to measure,’ Farrell said.”

Are these apps actually helpful? Maybe. But they require maintenance and constant updating. They could prevent some of the virus from spreading, but sticking to tried and true methods of social distancing, wearing masks, and washing hands work better.

Whitney Grace, October 19, 2020

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