Abstract

BackgroundSimulation study results suggest that COVID-19 contact tracing apps have the potential to achieve pandemic control. Concordantly, high app adoption rates were a stipulated prerequisite for success. Early studies on potential adoption were encouraging. Several factors predicting adoption rates were investigated, especially pertaining to user characteristics. Since then, several countries have released COVID-19 contact tracing apps.ObjectiveThis study’s primary aim is to investigate the quality characteristics of national European COVID-19 contact tracing apps, thereby shifting attention from user to app characteristics. The secondary aim is to investigate associations between app quality and adoption. Finally, app features contributing to higher app quality were identified.MethodsEligible COVID-19 contact tracing apps were those released by national health authorities of European Union member states, former member states, and countries of the European Free Trade Association, all countries with comparable legal standards concerning personal data protection and app use voluntariness. The Mobile App Rating Scale was used to assess app quality. An interdisciplinary team, consisting of two health and two human–computer interaction scientists, independently conducted Mobile App Rating Scale ratings. To investigate associations between app quality and adoption rates and infection rates, Bayesian linear regression analyses were conducted.ResultsWe discovered 21 national COVID-19 contact tracing apps, all demonstrating high quality overall and high-level functionality, aesthetics, and information quality. However, the average app adoption rate of 22.9% (SD 12.5%) was below the level recommended by simulation studies. Lower levels of engagement-oriented app design were detected, with substantial variations between apps. By regression analyses, the best-case adoption rate was calculated by assuming apps achieve the highest ratings. The mean best-case adoption rates for engagement and overall app quality were 39.5% and 43.6%, respectively. Higher adoption rates were associated with lower cumulative infection rates. Overall, we identified 5 feature categories (symptom assessment and monitoring, regularly updated information, individualization, tracing, and communication) and 14 individual features that contributed to higher app quality. These 14 features were a symptom checker, a symptom diary, statistics on COVID-19, app use, public health instructions and restrictions, information of burden on health care system, assigning personal data, regional updates, control over tracing activity, contact diary, venue check-in, chats, helplines, and app-sharing capacity.ConclusionsEuropean national health authorities have generally released high quality COVID-19 contact tracing apps, with regard to functionality, aesthetics, and information quality. However, the app’s engagement-oriented design generally was of lower quality, even though regression analyses results identify engagement as a promising optimization target to increase adoption rates. Associations between higher app adoption and lower infection rates are consistent with simulation study results, albeit acknowledging that app use might be part of a broader set of protective attitudes and behaviors for self and others. Various features were identified that could guide further engagement-enhancing app development.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCOVID-19 Contact Tracing AppsFor the first time, digital technology could play a key role in fighting a global health crisis

  • This study focused entirely on COVID-19 contact tracing apps released by national health authorities, rendering the results especially important to public health officials and policy makers

  • The member states of the European Union, associated countries, and former members with almost identical legal regulations on the voluntariness of use and data protection regulations serve as an excellent real-life laboratory for investigating tracing apps that have been released by the various national health authorities

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 Contact Tracing AppsFor the first time, digital technology could play a key role in fighting a global health crisis. Hinch and colleagues [4] have assumed a generation time for virus transmission of just 6 days and an epidemic doubling time of 3-3.5 days, resulting in a large proportion of the population potentially becoming infected within short periods of time in the absence of any effective intervention. For this reason, modeling study results have continuously suggested that manual contact tracing might be too slow, largely due to personnel limitations, and only feasible in locations with low incidence rates [1,2,5]. Several countries have released COVID-19 contact tracing apps

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