Mobile Apps to Fight the COVID-19 Crisis
Abstract
:1. Summary
2. Data Description
- An indication (yes/no) whether the app was considered interesting for more in-depth analysis (interestingApp). Our selection criteria included the novelty of the app at the technological and governance level, the sophisticated use and generation of data, and the potential for fighting the pandemic. We evaluated as “interesting” all contact tracing apps, apps with more sophisticated functions for personal data sharing and exchange (compared to simple symptom trackers), as well as the ones with innovative features and/or technical solutions (such as decentralised data management).
- The type of organisation of the app provider (providerCategory). The attribute providerCategory may take the values non-profit organisation, community, technology company, health company, other type of company, university(ies) or research centre(s), international organisation, local/regional government or national government.
- An indication whether a health authority is/was involved in the development/distribution of the app and/or using data collected with the app (healthEntityInvolved). This attribute is not present for apps that were not considered interesting for further analysis. The attribute healthEntityInvolved may take the values health authority, health facilities, medical research institute(s) university(ies), consortium, no or na.
- An indication (yes/no), in the (EU) attribute, whether the app is/was released in an European Union (EU) country.
- The ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code of the country the app comes from (geographicCoverage).
- The continent the app comes from (continents).
- Category of the app (appCategory), according to the framework of app functionalities presented in Table 2. The attribute appCategory may take the values: (a) COVID-19 specific, for apps that were specifically developed to face the COVID-19 crisis; (b) COVID-19 influenced, for apps that existed before the COVID-19 crisis but were modified to help address it; (c) health-generic, for apps with generic health-related functionality that can also help with the COVID-19 crisis; and (d) other, for apps outside the health domain that can also help with the COVID-19 crisis.
- Category of the app functionality (appFunctionalityCategory), according to the framework of app functionalities presented in Table 2. The attribute appFunctionalityCategory may take the values: (a) expert support, for apps that were developed for specific experts (such as, for example, medical staff members) to help them carry out dedicated COVID-19 related duties; (b) information provision, for apps that are essentially one-directional channels of information about COVID-19; (c) personalised support, for apps that provide COVID-19 related personalised support (such as, for example, symptom trackers) without sharing collected data with third parties; (d) information exchange, for apps that provide bi-directional information exchange for COVID-19 related personalised support (i.e., including data sharing with third parties); (e) contact tracing, for apps that allow for identifying persons who may have been in contact with an individual infected with COVID-19; (f) notifications, for apps that offer COVID-19 related personal notification functionalities with or without having previously received personal data; (g) lockdown management, for apps that support lockdown management with functionalities such as mobility checking, exit management, etc.; (h) other-health for apps that offer other health-related functionalities; and (i) other for any other app that helps address the COVID-19 crisis.
- The app functionalities (appFunctionality), specifying the actual app functionalities according to the framework of app functionalities presented in Table 2 and in compliance to the app functionality categories presented there. The attribute is not present for apps that were not considered interesting for further analysis.
- Types of personal data collected by the app (typesOfPersonalData), with possible values equal to Proximity, Location as province/region, Location as GPS/cell tower data, Health status, Positive status and Other. The attribute is not present for apps that have not been considered interesting for further analysis.
- An indication (yes/no/na) whether the app clearly communicates what information it collects and how it processes it, explains how to request data deletion or informs about a clear window for data retention (clearPrivacyPolicy). Other key information for a clear privacy policy includes the privacy statement explaining that personal data collection is limited to what is necessary and that data is shared only upon explicit user consent (in the spirit of the GDPR—General Data Protection Regulation [8]). The attribute is not present for apps that have not been considered interesting for further analysis.
3. Methods
4. User Notes and Conclusions
- The two different app stores we monitored (App Store and Google Play) are describing the apps in a different way, using different attributes. Thus, we employed ETL procedures to get a harmonised view of the apps in both stores, with common attributes (i.e., schema-level harmonisation). We noticed, though, that in many cases the same app could have different (but almost similar) names in the two stores and/or be described in a different way, with the common attributes having different values. Since this observation was frequent, we preferred not to proceed at a data-level harmonisation and keep the apps published in both the stores as two different records. Figure 3 shows the numbers of apps published in both the stores (249 apps), in App Store only (359 apps) and in Google Play only (229 apps).
- Results from automatic (objective) processes can be combined with the findings of manual (subjective) work. However, to harmonise the results coming from inherently different viewpoints and approaches, we relied on cross-validation (peer reviews) of analysis results by more than one researcher. Furthermore, meetings to discuss the definition of the attributes, while the analysis was ongoing, were very useful to make sure there was a common understanding in the classification approach.
- As the first COVID-19 cases started in China in early December 2019, followed by the first cases in Europe in the second half of January 2020, with the World Health Organisation (WHO) declaring the global health emergency on 30 January 2020 [15], the actual emergence of COVID-19 related apps accelerated in April 2020 (see Figure 4 for the timeline of new COVID-19 related app releases in Google Play and App Store).
- The COVID-19 crisis led to the development of many different apps, much more than the contact tracing apps that were prominently present in the news and on social media. We now have a rich landscape of COVID-19 related apps available, and they are highly diverse across countries. Different clusters of functionalities can be spotted, but multiple practices emerge in terms of addressing quarantine management, checking mobility, etc.
- The public sector, i.e., local, regional and national governments, is by far the main provider of COVID-19-related apps, as shown in Figure 5 (although most of the times these apps were formally developed by companies contracted by the governments).
- Sharing of personal data seems often not regulated by clear privacy policies, especially for apps released in countries outside the EU. This was indicated when analysing the text provided in the app privacy policy. Further analysis on this dimension could be performed by installing and checking/completing the attributes from a user experience perspective.
- Almost every country, especially in the EU, adopted its own contact-tracing app. Most of these apps are based on Bluetooth technology to exchange data in a fully anonymous and privacy-respectful way.
- The geographic distribution of offers is highly diverse. Some countries (such as India, Brazil and the USA) provide a high number of apps, where besides apps released on a national scale, there are also apps with similar functionalities released by different cities or regions (hence functioning on a more local scale). We did not spot this general trend in European countries.
- The functionalities that the COVID-19 apps provide change over time. Whereas many apps focused on information provision about regional situations and training (e.g., how to wash hands) early on, we witness a peak of contact tracing apps over the summer of 2020, followed by an increase of apps that support re-entering to schools, work or online records of test results. Logically, the countries that were hit earlier by the crisis underwent this evolution earlier—as compared to those which were affected later.
- We also observe differences in the geographic distribution of app availability, which might be explained by the disparity in the popularity of iOS/Android per country.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
API | Application Programming Interface |
CSV | Comma-Separated Values |
CC BY 4.0 | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International |
ETL | Extract, Transform, Load |
EU | European Union |
FME | Feature Manipulation Engine |
GPS | Global Positioning System |
IPO | Input-Process-Output |
ISO | International Organisation for Standardisation |
JRC | Joint Research Centre |
WHO | World Health Organisation |
References
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Attribute Name | Values | Description |
---|---|---|
version | text | The app version analysed. |
interestingApp | yes/no | Indication if the app was considered interesting for in-depth analysis. |
status | active/not active | Indication if the app was still active on 28 February 2021. |
name | text | Name of the app. |
latestUpdate | date | Date of the latest app update before the app was analysed. |
storeName | text | List of the names of the stores that the app can be found. |
releaseDate | date | The release date of the app (each app is released only once). |
providerCategory | non-profit organisation; community; technology company; health company; other type of company; university(ies) or research centre(s); international organisation; local/regional government; national government | Type of organisation of the app provider. |
healthEntityInvolved | health authority; health facilities; medicine research institute(s) university(ies); consortium; no; na | Indication if a health authority is/has been involved in the development/distribution of the app and/or use of data collected with the app. |
EU | yes/no. | Indication if the app is/has been released in an EU country. |
geographicCoverage | ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code | ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code of the country the app comes from. |
continents | text | The continent the app comes from. |
appCategory | COVID-19 specific; COVID-19 influenced; health-generic; other | App category. |
appFunctionalityCategory | expert support; information provision; personalised support without data sharing; information exchange; contact tracing; notifications; lockdown management; other-health; other | App functionality category. |
appFunctionality | monitor overall situation; manage test; recruitment; telemedicine; help in self-isolation; training; statistics; prevention; medication; news; access to health services; self-diagnosis without data sharing; symptoms monitoring without data sharing; risk assessment without data sharing; self-diagnosis with data sharing; symptoms monitoring with data sharing; risk assessment with data sharing; manage self-isolation; communication with a doctor; proximity tracking; continuous location sharing; occasional location sharing; sending notifications; sending instructions; mobility for citizen in lockdown; exit management; mobility checking | App functionality |
typesOfPersonalData | proximity; location as province/region; location as GPS/cell tower data; health status; positive status; other | Types of personal data collected on the app. |
clearPrivacyPolicy | yes; no; na | Indication if the app clearly communicates what information it collects and how it processes it, explains how to request data deletion or informs about a clear window for data retention. Other key information for a clear privacy policy could be the privacy statement explaining that personal data collection is limited to what is necessary and that data is shared only upon explicit user consent. |
App Category | Functionality Category | Functionality |
---|---|---|
COVID-19 specific; COVID-19 influenced; health-generic | expert support | monitor overall situation |
manage test | ||
recruitment | ||
telemedicine | ||
help in self-isolation | ||
training | ||
information provision | statistics | |
prevention | ||
medication | ||
news | ||
access to health services | ||
personalised support | self-diagnosis without data sharing | |
symptoms monitoring without data sharing | ||
risk assessment without data sharing | ||
information exchange | self-diagnosis with data sharing | |
symptoms monitoring with data sharing | ||
risk assessment with data sharing | ||
manage self-isolation | ||
communication with a doctor | ||
contact tracing | proximity tracking | |
continuous location sharing | ||
occasional location sharing | ||
notifications | sending notifications | |
sending instructions | ||
lockdown management | mobility for citizen in lockdown | |
exit management | ||
mobility checking | ||
other-health | ||
other | other |
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Share and Cite
Tsinaraki, C.; Mitton, I.; Minghini, M.; Micheli, M.; Kotsev, A.; Hernandez Quiros, L.; Spinelli, F.-A.; Dalla Benetta, A.; Schade, S. Mobile Apps to Fight the COVID-19 Crisis. Data 2021, 6, 106. https://doi.org/10.3390/data6100106
Tsinaraki C, Mitton I, Minghini M, Micheli M, Kotsev A, Hernandez Quiros L, Spinelli F-A, Dalla Benetta A, Schade S. Mobile Apps to Fight the COVID-19 Crisis. Data. 2021; 6(10):106. https://doi.org/10.3390/data6100106
Chicago/Turabian StyleTsinaraki, Chrisa, Irena Mitton, Marco Minghini, Marina Micheli, Alexander Kotsev, Lorena Hernandez Quiros, Fabiano-Antonio Spinelli, Alessandro Dalla Benetta, and Sven Schade. 2021. "Mobile Apps to Fight the COVID-19 Crisis" Data 6, no. 10: 106. https://doi.org/10.3390/data6100106
APA StyleTsinaraki, C., Mitton, I., Minghini, M., Micheli, M., Kotsev, A., Hernandez Quiros, L., Spinelli, F. -A., Dalla Benetta, A., & Schade, S. (2021). Mobile Apps to Fight the COVID-19 Crisis. Data, 6(10), 106. https://doi.org/10.3390/data6100106