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Digital Contact Tracing Apps for COVID-19: Development of a Citizen-Centered Evaluation Framework

BACKGROUND: The silent transmission of COVID-19 has led to an exponential growth of fatal infections. With over 4 million deaths worldwide, the need to control and stem transmission has never been more critical. New COVID-19 vaccines offer hope. However, administration timelines, long-term protectio...

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Autores principales: Tsvyatkova, Damyanka, Buckley, Jim, Beecham, Sarah, Chochlov, Muslim, O’Keeffe, Ian R, Razzaq, Abdul, Rekanar, Kaavya, Richardson, Ita, Welsh, Thomas, Storni, Cristiano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8919989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35084338
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/30691
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author Tsvyatkova, Damyanka
Buckley, Jim
Beecham, Sarah
Chochlov, Muslim
O’Keeffe, Ian R
Razzaq, Abdul
Rekanar, Kaavya
Richardson, Ita
Welsh, Thomas
Storni, Cristiano
author_facet Tsvyatkova, Damyanka
Buckley, Jim
Beecham, Sarah
Chochlov, Muslim
O’Keeffe, Ian R
Razzaq, Abdul
Rekanar, Kaavya
Richardson, Ita
Welsh, Thomas
Storni, Cristiano
author_sort Tsvyatkova, Damyanka
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The silent transmission of COVID-19 has led to an exponential growth of fatal infections. With over 4 million deaths worldwide, the need to control and stem transmission has never been more critical. New COVID-19 vaccines offer hope. However, administration timelines, long-term protection, and effectiveness against potential variants are still unknown. In this context, contact tracing and digital contact tracing apps (CTAs) continue to offer a mechanism to help contain transmission, keep people safe, and help kickstart economies. However, CTAs must address a wide range of often conflicting concerns, which make their development/evolution complex. For example, the app must preserve citizens’ privacy while gleaning their close contacts and as much epidemiological information as possible. OBJECTIVE: In this study, we derived a compare-and-contrast evaluative framework for CTAs that integrates and expands upon existing works in this domain, with a particular focus on citizen adoption; we call this framework the Citizen-Focused Compare-and-Contrast Evaluation Framework (C(3)EF) for CTAs. METHODS: The framework was derived using an iterative approach. First, we reviewed the literature on CTAs and mobile health app evaluations, from which we derived a preliminary set of attributes and organizing pillars. These attributes and the probing questions that we formulated were iteratively validated, augmented, and refined by applying the provisional framework against a selection of CTAs. Each framework pillar was then subjected to internal cross-team scrutiny, where domain experts cross-checked sufficiency, relevancy, specificity, and nonredundancy of the attributes, and their organization in pillars. The consolidated framework was further validated on the selected CTAs to create a finalized version of C(3)EF for CTAs, which we offer in this paper. RESULTS: The final framework presents seven pillars exploring issues related to CTA design, adoption, and use: (General) Characteristics, Usability, Data Protection, Effectiveness, Transparency, Technical Performance, and Citizen Autonomy. The pillars encompass attributes, subattributes, and a set of illustrative questions (with associated example answers) to support app design, evaluation, and evolution. An online version of the framework has been made available to developers, health authorities, and others interested in assessing CTAs. CONCLUSIONS: Our CTA framework provides a holistic compare-and-contrast tool that supports the work of decision-makers in the development and evolution of CTAs for citizens. This framework supports reflection on design decisions to better understand and optimize the design compromises in play when evolving current CTAs for increased public adoption. We intend this framework to serve as a foundation for other researchers to build on and extend as the technology matures and new CTAs become available.
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spelling pubmed-89199892022-03-15 Digital Contact Tracing Apps for COVID-19: Development of a Citizen-Centered Evaluation Framework Tsvyatkova, Damyanka Buckley, Jim Beecham, Sarah Chochlov, Muslim O’Keeffe, Ian R Razzaq, Abdul Rekanar, Kaavya Richardson, Ita Welsh, Thomas Storni, Cristiano JMIR Mhealth Uhealth Original Paper BACKGROUND: The silent transmission of COVID-19 has led to an exponential growth of fatal infections. With over 4 million deaths worldwide, the need to control and stem transmission has never been more critical. New COVID-19 vaccines offer hope. However, administration timelines, long-term protection, and effectiveness against potential variants are still unknown. In this context, contact tracing and digital contact tracing apps (CTAs) continue to offer a mechanism to help contain transmission, keep people safe, and help kickstart economies. However, CTAs must address a wide range of often conflicting concerns, which make their development/evolution complex. For example, the app must preserve citizens’ privacy while gleaning their close contacts and as much epidemiological information as possible. OBJECTIVE: In this study, we derived a compare-and-contrast evaluative framework for CTAs that integrates and expands upon existing works in this domain, with a particular focus on citizen adoption; we call this framework the Citizen-Focused Compare-and-Contrast Evaluation Framework (C(3)EF) for CTAs. METHODS: The framework was derived using an iterative approach. First, we reviewed the literature on CTAs and mobile health app evaluations, from which we derived a preliminary set of attributes and organizing pillars. These attributes and the probing questions that we formulated were iteratively validated, augmented, and refined by applying the provisional framework against a selection of CTAs. Each framework pillar was then subjected to internal cross-team scrutiny, where domain experts cross-checked sufficiency, relevancy, specificity, and nonredundancy of the attributes, and their organization in pillars. The consolidated framework was further validated on the selected CTAs to create a finalized version of C(3)EF for CTAs, which we offer in this paper. RESULTS: The final framework presents seven pillars exploring issues related to CTA design, adoption, and use: (General) Characteristics, Usability, Data Protection, Effectiveness, Transparency, Technical Performance, and Citizen Autonomy. The pillars encompass attributes, subattributes, and a set of illustrative questions (with associated example answers) to support app design, evaluation, and evolution. An online version of the framework has been made available to developers, health authorities, and others interested in assessing CTAs. CONCLUSIONS: Our CTA framework provides a holistic compare-and-contrast tool that supports the work of decision-makers in the development and evolution of CTAs for citizens. This framework supports reflection on design decisions to better understand and optimize the design compromises in play when evolving current CTAs for increased public adoption. We intend this framework to serve as a foundation for other researchers to build on and extend as the technology matures and new CTAs become available. JMIR Publications 2022-03-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8919989/ /pubmed/35084338 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/30691 Text en ©Damyanka Tsvyatkova, Jim Buckley, Sarah Beecham, Muslim Chochlov, Ian R O’Keeffe, Abdul Razzaq, Kaavya Rekanar, Ita Richardson, Thomas Welsh, Cristiano Storni, COVIGILANT Group. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (https://mhealth.jmir.org), 11.03.2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://mhealth.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Tsvyatkova, Damyanka
Buckley, Jim
Beecham, Sarah
Chochlov, Muslim
O’Keeffe, Ian R
Razzaq, Abdul
Rekanar, Kaavya
Richardson, Ita
Welsh, Thomas
Storni, Cristiano
Digital Contact Tracing Apps for COVID-19: Development of a Citizen-Centered Evaluation Framework
title Digital Contact Tracing Apps for COVID-19: Development of a Citizen-Centered Evaluation Framework
title_full Digital Contact Tracing Apps for COVID-19: Development of a Citizen-Centered Evaluation Framework
title_fullStr Digital Contact Tracing Apps for COVID-19: Development of a Citizen-Centered Evaluation Framework
title_full_unstemmed Digital Contact Tracing Apps for COVID-19: Development of a Citizen-Centered Evaluation Framework
title_short Digital Contact Tracing Apps for COVID-19: Development of a Citizen-Centered Evaluation Framework
title_sort digital contact tracing apps for covid-19: development of a citizen-centered evaluation framework
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8919989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35084338
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/30691
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