Stil, a long-time linker, this afternoon writes ..

COVIDSafe might actually be useful after all

New modelling suggests that Australia's troubled contact tracing app could help 
mitigate the severity of a COVID-19 second wave if problems are fixed and more 
people use it.

By Stilgherrian for The Full Tilt | June 30, 2020 - 16:23 AEST 
https://www.zdnet.com/article/covidsafe-might-actually-be-useful-after-all/


COVIDSafe, Australia's coronavirus contact tracing app, may not be totally 
useless, according to modelling released on Tuesday by the Sax Institute in 
Sydney.

The peer-reviewed research (also published today at 
https://www.phrp.com.au/issues/june-2020-volume-30-issue-2/steming-the-flow-how-much-can-the-australian-smartphone-app-help-to-control-covid-19/<https://www.phrp.com.au/issues/june-2020-volume-30-issue-2/stemming-the-flow-how-much-can-the-australian-smartphone-app-help-to-control-covid-19/>)
 shows that it would be "vital" to continue social distancing and large-scale 
testing to avoid a so-called "second wave" of COVID-19 infections, but also 
that COVIDSafe "has the potential to be an important adjunct".

"Depending on the level of community uptake of the app, it could have a 
significant mitigating effect on a second wave of COVID-19 in Australia," they 
wrote.

The team calibrated their model using actual Australian data up to 16 May 2020. 
They modelled five scenarios out to December 31, varying the tapering off of 
social restrictions and testing, and different levels of COVIDSafe use.

"In all five scenarios, the modelling projects a second wave of COVID-19 if the 
easing of restrictions continues," the researchers wrote. The size and timing 
of the second wave would depend on how quickly restrictions are lifted.

"In all scenarios, a high app uptake (61% or 80%) noticeably flattens the 
epidemic curve, giving time for the health system to respond and social 
distancing measures to be promoted," they wrote.

"The COVIDSafe app has the potential to moderate the size of the second wave. 
The effect of the app increases as its uptake increases, to a 
disproportionately greater extent than the increment in uptake."

The researchers looked at a "high level" of app uptake: 61% of the population. 
That's their estimate of the proportion of Australians with a smartphone, in 
the age range likely to use the app (older than 14 years), and with the 
technical literacy to download it.

At this level, the number of second-wave COVID-19 cases was reduced by between 
one-third and three-fifths when compared with zero app use, depending on the 
scenario.

At 80% app use, the reduction in cases was more than 70% in three of the five 
scenarios -- although the researchers acknowledge that this is "an aspirational 
level that would require an increase in smartphone ownership".

At a low level of app uptake (27% of smartphone users aged 14 and over, the 
uptake level as of May 20), the number of extra cases was only reduced by 
between one-eighth and one-quarter.

(covidsafe-modelling-table2.png Image: Sax Institute)

As with all models, this research has its limits. It's based on an "average 
disease profile" and on behaviours generalised to the whole Australian 
population.

Age-related effects on behaviours, transmission rates, and app use were not 
included.

"Also, the model does not account for events with low probability and large 
effect, such as simultaneous arrival of a large number of infected 
international travellers," the researchers wrote.

They also acknowledge that there are instances where the app may not work and 
that a "large proportion of the population" must be motivated to download and 
use the app consistently.

So far that's not happening. The number of COVIDSafe downloads flattened 
earlier this month, and usage still sits well below 30%.

"Although the app would have benefits in a second wave of COVID-19, the current 
low incidence of COVID-19 in Australia may create a perception that a second 
wave will not occur, and this may militate against preparedness," they wrote, 
although that was before the latest spike in cases in Victoria.

'THERE'S NO WAY WE'RE SHIFTING' TO THE GOOGLE-APPLE TRACING API

As the Sax Institute researchers note, it still seems "likely" that lingering 
privacy concerns will affect app uptake. COVIDSafe has also been plagued by 
technical problems, mixed messaging, misinformation, and a lack of transparency.

Some of the technical and privacy problems could be addressed by switching to 
the new contact tracing API developed jointly by Google and Apple -- something 
that wasn't available when COVIDSafe was developed.

But the Australian government has once more refused to take that path.

"There's no way we're shifting to a platform that will take out the contact 
tracers," said Nick Coatsworth, Australia's deputy Chief Medical Officer, on 
Channel Ten's The Project on Sunday.

"The Apple Google app, it fundamentally changes the locus of control," he said 
-- although removing centralised control is actually the point.

Internationally, the effectiveness of COVID-19 tracing apps has been patchy at 
best.

France also went its own way rather than using the Google-Apple tech, but the 
resulting StopCovid app has been underwhelming. Less than 2% of the French 
population has activated the app, and a quarter of them have subsequently 
uninstalled it.

The UK dumped its developed efforts after an initial trial.

Meanwhile, Australia's COVIDSafe has yet to identify a new COVID-19 case who 
hasn't already been found using traditional contact tracing methods.
--


_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to