• Das Gesundheitswesen · Sep 2020

    [Contact-Tracing Apps in Contact Tracing of COVID-19].

    • Tina Jahnel, Sven Kernebeck, Simone Böbel, Benedikt Buchner, Eva Grill, Sebastian Hinck, Robert Ranisch, Dietrich Rothenbacher, Benjamin Schüz, Dagmar Starke, Julian Wienert, Hajo Zeeb, and Ansgar Gerhardus.
    • Abteilung 1: Versorgungsforschung - Department for Health Services Research, Institut für Public Health und Pflegeforschung, Universität Bremen, Bremen.
    • Gesundheitswesen. 2020 Sep 1; 82 (8-09): 664-669.

    AbstractContact tracing is currently one of the most effective measures to contain the COVID-19 pandemic. In order to identify persons that would otherwise not be known or remembered and to keep the time delay when reporting an infection and when contacting people as short as possible, digital contact tracing using smartphones seems to be a reasonable measure additional to manual contact tracing. Although first modelling studies predicted a positive effect in terms of prompt contact tracing, no empirically reliable data are as yet available, neither on the population-wide benefit nor on the potential risks of contact tracing apps. Risk-benefit assessment of such an app includes investigating whether such an app fulfils its purpose, as also research on the effectiveness, risks and side effects, and implementation processes (e. g. planning and inclusion of different participants). The aim of this article was to give an overview of possible public health benefits as well as technical, social, legal and ethical aspects of a contact-tracing app in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, conditions for the widest possible use of the app are presented.© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.

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