NHS Covid-19 app ‘will be needed for quite a while to contain future outbreaks’

9 February 2021, 14:34

Coronavirus app
NHS Covid-19 app ‘will be needed for quite a while to contain future outbreaks’. Picture: PA

App has been downloaded 21.6 million times since launching in September.

The NHS Covid-19 app will be needed for “quite a while” even with a vaccine, a developer behind the technology has said.

More than 1.7 million people across England and Wales have been asked to isolate via the app since it launched in September, having been downloaded 21.6 million times in total. Scotland and Northern Ireland have their own apps.

Research by The Alan Turing Institute and Oxford University – which is still subject to peer review – suggests that the app has so far prevented around 600,000 cases.

Wolfgang Emmerich, chief executive for Zuhlke Engineering, one of the firms responsible for supporting development and launch of the app, told PA that the tool has “proven to be quite an important public health instrument” but warned it will probably be a necessity for some time, particularly to protect those who choose not to vaccinate.

“I don’t want to break bad news but the app will be in use for quite a while,” Mr Emmerich said to PA.

“Even though the vaccines might reduce infectiousness, it won’t remove it completely so there will still be cases where people who’ve been vaccinated will pass on infections, and these cases need to be contained and the app is probably a very good mechanism, but not the only way, to contain them in a cost effective way.”

The technology is designed to keep an anonymous log of individuals that people come into close contact with using Bluetooth, as well as allowing users to check into venues by scanning a QR code when restaurants and other indoor public spaces are open.

Due to the privacy-preserving nature of the app, Test and Trace do not know who has been alerted to isolate by it, meaning there is a risk people could disobey warnings.

Mr Emmerich acknowledged that is a possibility but believes those pinged would at least take some caution.

Coronavirus App
(PA Graphics)

“It’s probably fair to say people have ignored it from time to time, but even if they did they probably would have been more careful and not had granny over, that they otherwise might have,” he told PA.

Mr Emmerich said that research was underway comparing infection rates in areas where there is a high usage of the app, to similar areas that have a lower uptake of the app.

Early results suggest there is a “significant difference”, he explained.

“We do know that the app has had an effect.”

Zuhlke Engineering signed a £9 million contract with the Government in September to continue updating the app for six months.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

TikTok on a smartphone

TikTok to begin appeal against possible US ban

The Darktrace wesbite

Darktrace set to leave London Stock Exchange at end of September

An unidentified hacker in dark hoodie performing at a comupter

UK convenes nations for talks on global cybersecurity

Icons of social media apps, including Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and WhatsApp, are displayed on a mobile phone screen

Meta to begin training AI on public posts from UK Facebook and Instagram users

JLR Rover the Boston Dynamics robot dog (JLR/PA)

JLR’s new ‘Rover’ is a robotic dog employed to protect brand’s EV facility

The logo and name of the technology company OpenAI on a smarthpone

OpenAI unveils new models designed to think more before answering

A person looking at a mobile phone whose screen has been blurred

Government strengthens Online Safety Act to crack down on revenge porn

Vodafone and Three logos

Vodafone and Three merger could increase phone bills for millions, watchdog says

A mobile phone mast being photographed by a mobile phone

6G network at least a decade away, expert says

A sign for the London underground in central London.

Teenager arrested over Transport for London cyber attack

Cyber security

BT ‘logs 2,000 signals of potential cyber attacks every second’

ChatGPT website with pink lettering displayed on a screen

OpenAI in talks to raise funds at £115bn valuation – reports

Person typing on a laptop

UK data centres to be designated as ‘critical infrastructure’

A plaque outside the offices of the Data Protection Commission in Dublin

Irish watchdog launches probe into Google’s AI model

The technology giant said the growth of cloud computing and artificial intelligence was key to the increasing investment (Niall Carson/PA)

Amazon Web Services ‘to invest £8bn in UK over next five years’

The hands of a person on a laptop keyboard

Most people have no plan for digital assets upon death, Which? warns