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Evaluation of the Design and Implementation of a Peer-To-Peer COVID-19 Contact Tracing Mobile App (COCOA) in Japan

Ichiro Nakamoto, Ming Jiang, Jilin Zhang, Weiqing Zhuang, Yan Guo, Ming-Hui Jin, Yi Huang, Kuotai Tang

2020JMIR mhealth and uhealth54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We evaluate a Bluetooth-based mobile contact-confirming app, COVID-19 Contact-Confirming Application (COCOA), which is being used in Japan to contain the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel virus termed SARS-COV-2. The app prioritizes the protection of users' privacy from a variety of parties (eg, other users, potential attackers, and public authorities), enhances the capacity to balance the current load of excessive pressure on health care systems (eg, local triage of exposure risk and reduction of in-person hospital visits), increases the speed of responses to the pandemic (eg, automated recording of close contact based on proximity), and reduces operation errors and population mobility. The peer-to-peer framework of COCOA is intended to provide the public with dynamic and credible updates on the COVID-19 pandemic without sacrificing the privacy of their information. However, cautions must be exercised to address critical concerns, such as the rate of participation and delays in data sharing. The results of a simulation imply that the participation rate in Japan needs to be close 90% to effectively control the spread of COVID-19.

Topics & Concepts

Contact tracingInternet privacyBluetoothPandemicPopulationCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)TriageComputer sciencePublic healthComputer securityBusinessMedicineMedical emergencyEnvironmental healthDiseaseTelecommunicationsNursingInfectious disease (medical specialty)WirelessPathologyCOVID-19 Digital Contact TracingMobile Health and mHealth ApplicationsPrivacy, Security, and Data Protection
Evaluation of the Design and Implementation of a Peer-To-Peer COVID-19 Contact Tracing Mobile App (COCOA) in Japan | Litcius