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Pennsylvania Launches New Coronavirus Exposure Notification App

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP/KDKA) -- Pennsylvania's new coronavirus exposure-notification app is now available on app stores.

The release of the app Tuesday is part of Pennsylvania's effort to more quickly break chains of transmission by using the new technology to notify people who may have been exposed.

The state has a $1.9 million contract, using federal grant dollars, to deploy and maintain the app with software developer NearForm Ltd, an Ireland-based company whose app there has been downloaded by more than one-fourth of that country's residents.

Gov. Tom Wolf was scheduled to appear at a news conference in Philadelphia later Tuesday to discuss it.

The app is based on smartphone technology developed by Apple and Google. It is similar to the app rolled out by Virginia last month, when it became the first U.S. state to use new pandemic technology created by Apple and Google. A handful of other states have also launched apps using the Apple and Google technology.

pennsylvania-coronavirus-app
(Image Courtesy: Pa.gov)

The app will work with the state of Delaware's app, which released last week, and it will also be compatible with those of other states when they launch on the NearForm platform, state officials say.

Use will be limited to people 18 and over.

It is designed to automatically notify people if they might have been exposed to the coronavirus, and state officials say the app does not store location information, personal information or the identify of anyone who is in close enough range to possibly be exposed.

The app lets you put in how you feel, and will detect if you've been in close contact with another user who later tests positive for COVID-19. If that happens, you'll get a notification called a "Covid 19 Exposure Alert." If you tap on the notification, you will be given public health guidance on what to do next.

"This should be a little better in terms of saying, 'hey, you don't have to pick up a phone.' You get notified if someone is in contact with someone who has the disease," said Governor Wolf.

One thing Dr. Levine can't stress enough is that your information is anonymous and the app does not use GPS services to track your location.

"If or when you receive an exposure alert, it won't be able to tell you who you came in contact with. Apple and Google were very specific to ensure privacy is protected," said Dr. Levine.

In addition to exposure notification, the Pennsylvania app has a data feature that allows the user to see up-to-date information on case numbers, hospitalizations and deaths by county, as well a feature that helps the user to monitor their symptoms even if they have not tested positive.

It relies on Bluetooth wireless technology to detect when someone who downloaded the app has spent time near another app user who later tests positive for the virus.

As a threshold, the app uses the Centers for Disease Control guideline of being within 6 feet for at least 15 minutes, state health officials have said.

The identity of app users will be protected by encryption and anonymous identifier beacons that change frequently, the companies have said.

Someone who tests positive in Pennsylvania is reported to either the Department of Health or a municipal health department agency and contacted by a case investigator. That case investigator will ask the infected person if they have the app and if they are willing to use it to notify any mobile-phone users who have been in close contact with them in the past 14 days, state officials said.

If they are willing to use it, they are given a six-digit code to enter to then issue a notification, state officials said.

A person who receives a notification will get something like an alert to check the app, with instructions from the Department of Health on how to protect themselves and others, including information about staying at home, quarantining and seeking medical help.

The identity of the person who was infected is shielded from people receiving a notification, and vice versa, they said.

For more information about the fight against coronavirus in Pennsylvania, visit this link.

(TM and © Copyright 2020 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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