Germany launches smartwatch app to monitor virus spread

Published April 8, 2020
Results will be represented in an interactive online map that would make it possible for the health authorities and the general public to assess the prevalence of infections down to postcode level. — Reuters/File
Results will be represented in an interactive online map that would make it possible for the health authorities and the general public to assess the prevalence of infections down to postcode level. — Reuters/File

BERLIN: Germany’s public health authority launched a smartwatch app on Tuesday in partnership with healthtech startup Thryve to help monitor the spread of Covid-19 and analyse whether measures to contain the novel coronavirus pandemic are working.

The app gathers vital signs from volunteers wearing smartwatches or fitness trackers — including pulse, temperature and sleep — to analyse whether they are symptomatic of the flu-like illness.

Results will be represented in an interactive online map that would make it possible — together with other data inputs — for the health authorities and the general public to assess the prevalence of infections down to postcode level.

“If the sample is big enough to capture enough symptomatic patients, that would help us to draw conclusions on how infections are spreading and whether containment measures are working,” said Lothar Wieler, head of the Robert Koch Institute that is coordinating Germany’s coronavirus response.

Germany has the fourth highest Covid-19 caseload behind the United States, Spain and Italy at nearly 100,000 but has kept fatalities down to a relatively low 1,600 thanks to early and extensive testing.

The German authorities have been more cautious than some Asian countries in using digital technology to fight the coronavirus, restrained by Europe’s strict data privacy laws and mindful of public scepticism towards any surveillance reminiscent of Nazi- or communist-era rule.

But a similar approach has been used here to model the spread of influenza while, in the United States, connected ‘smart’ thermometers distributed by Kinsa Health have offered early insights into how quickly Covid-19 is spreading, the New York Times reported last month.

The Corona Data Donation app, available for download in the Google Play Store and Apple App Store, is voluntary and data would be processed anonymously. To register, users should enter their postcode, age, sex, height and weight.

Data shared by their connected devices would be monitored on an ongoing basis, with telltale readings such as a high temperature or disturbed sleep indicating whether an individual may have come down with Covid-19.

Project leader Dirk Brockmann said he hoped 100,000 people — or 10pc of Germany’s smartwatch and fitness tracker users — would sign up. Even 10,000 would be analytically useful, he added.

The Corona Data Donation app was developed in four weeks in partnership with Berlin-based startup, a data-driven ‘wearable health’ startup which realised earlier this year that its approach could be adapted to detect Covid-19.

Thryve approached the Robert Koch Institute with its findings, said spokesman Sebastian Wochnik. “Their epidemiologists really liked this unique solution. With more data, their models obviously work better,” he said.

Published in Dawn, April 8th, 2020

Opinion

Editorial

Judiciary’s SOS
Updated 28 Mar, 2024

Judiciary’s SOS

The ball is now in CJP Isa’s court, and he will feel pressure to take action.
Data protection
28 Mar, 2024

Data protection

WHAT do we want? Data protection laws. When do we want them? Immediately. Without delay, if we are to prevent ...
Selling humans
28 Mar, 2024

Selling humans

HUMAN traders feed off economic distress; they peddle promises of a better life to the impoverished who, mired in...
New terror wave
Updated 27 Mar, 2024

New terror wave

The time has come for decisive government action against militancy.
Development costs
27 Mar, 2024

Development costs

A HEFTY escalation of 30pc in the cost of ongoing federal development schemes is one of the many decisions where the...
Aitchison controversy
Updated 27 Mar, 2024

Aitchison controversy

It is hoped that higher authorities realise that politics and nepotism have no place in schools.