Wishlist Please, enable Wishlist.
Log in / Sign in

Lost password?

Cart $0.00 0

No products in the cart.

Return To Shop
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: $0.00

Checkout

Free shipping over 49$
Air Purifier SpecialistAir Purifier Specialist
  • Shop
  • About Us
  • News, Reviews & Info
    • Latest News
    • Product Reviews
    • Tips and Information
  • Contact Us

B.C. looks to Singapore for insights on contact tracing apps in fight against COVID-19

25 April 2020 /Posted byBarbara / 399

Sean Davidson is a tech executive who has been living and working in Singapore for a decade. He voluntarily uses TraceTogether, a mobile app launched by the government that traces contact with other people —including those with COVID-19.

A man and woman wearing face masks walk past the Merlion statue in Singapore, one of the countries using contact tracing apps to plank the curve of COVID-19. (Ee Ming Toh/The Associated Press)

Like 5.6 million other residents in Singapore, Sean Davidson observes the local law and wears a face mask whenever he goes out for work, shopping or exercise. 

What distinguishes the Victoria, B.C.-born man from the rest of the population? He is one of the million people in the Southeast Asian nation who uses an app called TraceTogether, a digital innovation that British Columbia is still in the early stages of examining.

According to the Singapore government’s website, the TraceTogether app uses Bluetooth signals to measure the proximity and duration of an encounter between two users. Should an app user be diagnosed with COVID-19, the Ministry of Health will look at the information stored on the person’s mobile device to identify a list of other app users who were in close contact with the infected person during the previous 14 days.

‘A low-key app’

Davidson, a tech executive who has called Singapore home for 10 years, learned about the app from a WhatsApp chat group. As an early adopter of the novel technology, which rolled out on March 20, he doesn’t feel it has much intrusion on his daily life. 

“It’s probably the most low-key app I’ve ever used and certainly on my phone at the moment … It’s just a totally rudimentary interface that time-stamps,” the 55-year-old said to Stephen Quinn, host of The Early Edition.

The Singapore government says it only stores the app user’s phone number and a random identity code on a secure server. No geolocation data is collected. All the proximity data generated with Bluetooth signals is stored on the user’s device and automatically destroyed after 21 days.

Davidson has not been contacted by the Ministry of Health, but should he be identified as someone who’s come in close contact with a COVID-19 case, he would be required by Singapore law to provide any physical contact information, which may include the TraceTogether data stored on his phone.

Sean Davidson holds his mobile device, which is installed with the TraceTogether app. (Sean Davidson)

Privacy concern

The obligation to submit personal information to the government is a concern to B.C. Information and Privacy Commissioner Michael McEvoy, who has talked to his Singapore counterpart about TraceTogether. 

“I don’t know if that’s why people are hesitating in Singapore,” McEvoy said on The Early Edition of the fewer than 20 per cent of Singapore residents who are using the app. 

In a recent national address, Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong urged all citizens to install and use TraceTogether in order to make the app effective in fighting the pandemic in the island nation, which had recorded more than 12,000 confirmed coronavirus cases as of Apr. 24. 

McEvoy said Singapore’s digital contact tracing practice embodies some principles of information protection, such as voluntary participation and minimal data collection. But he also said in order to ensure public trust in a contact tracing app, data gathering should only serve the purpose of suppressing the virus.

“You can imagine you collected a volume of information tracking people wherever they go, whoever they associate with. That might be of considerable interest to private corporations, or certainly for state use or for law enforcement.”

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said in a recent national address that everyone in the country should install and use the contact tracing app, TraceTogether. (Singapore Ministry of Communication and Information/The Associated Press)

  

Davidson admitted privacy is not his top concern when using TraceTogether. He said it makes sense to use the digital tool for disease control. He also said if a contact tracing app is offered in B.C., he will recommend his family living there use it.

“If you’re using mobile apps and social media … there’s a lot of your information out there. You don’t have nearly as much privacy as you probably think you do.”

To hear the interview with Sean Davidson and Michael McEvoy on The Early Edition, tap the audio link below:

Sean Davidson is a former B.C. resident who now lives in Singapore. The Asian country is using an app called “Trace Together” which helps people trace covid-19 infections. Then, Stephen Quinn speaks with Information and Privacy Commissioner of B.C. Michael McEvoy about the challenge getting this app approved in the province. 12:33

Read More

Tags: bacteria, Covid 19, Health Alert, viruses
Share Post
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Mail to friend
  • Linkedin
  • Whatsapp
  • Skype
Doctors Report People in Their...
Car plants idle, GM and Ford t...

About author

About Author

Barbara

Other posts by Barbara

Related posts

Pinecrest Nursing Home, hard hit by COVID-19, says outbreak is over

14 May 2020
Pinecrest Nursing Home, hard hit by COVID-19, says outbreak is over - newhamburgindependent.ca Continue reading

Pangolins May Not Have Been The Intermediary Host of SARS-CoV-2 After All

14 May 2020
TESSA KOUMOUNDOUROS 14 MAY 2020 Understanding the origins of the virus causing COVID-19 is one of the key questions scientists are trying to resolve while... Continue reading
Convalescent plasma is safe to treat COVID-19: nationwide study
Latest News
Read more

Convalescent plasma is safe to treat COVID-19: nationwide study

14 May 2020
The most comprehensive national study to date has found that convalescent plasma appears to be safe to use on COVID-19 patients, a promising development in... Continue reading
Studies provide more evidence that coronavirus damages the kidneys
Latest News
Read more

Studies provide more evidence that coronavirus damages the kidneys

14 May 2020
One-third of hospitalized coronavirus patients have kidney damage and high levels of the virus in the organs, two studies revealOne study found that 36.6% of... Continue reading
New York Sent Recovering Coronavirus Patients to Nursing Homes: ‘It Was a Fatal Error’
Latest News
Read more

New York Sent Recovering Coronavirus Patients to Nursing Homes: ‘It Was a Fatal Error’

14 May 2020
In late March, Dottie Hickey got a call from Luxor Nursing & Rehabilitation at Mills Pond, the nursing home where her sister lived. The 79-year-old... Continue reading

Comments are closed

Recent Posts

  • Pinecrest Nursing Home, hard hit by COVID-19, says outbreak is over
  • Pangolins May Not Have Been The Intermediary Host of SARS-CoV-2 After All
  • Convalescent plasma is safe to treat COVID-19: nationwide study
  • Studies provide more evidence that coronavirus damages the kidneys
  • New York Sent Recovering Coronavirus Patients to Nursing Homes: ‘It Was a Fatal Error’

Recent Comments

    © Copyright 2013      Air Technology Solutions Canada

    Powered by  Barbara Blackett Consulting
    • Shipping and Returns
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use