Scotland Times

Saturday, May 31, 2025

Contact tracing: British apps plan to share data

Contact tracing: British apps plan to share data

Good news today for users of the contact tracing apps in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Jersey.

If they travel to each other's territory, they will now get alerts if they come into contact with an infected person. Users of the NHS Covid-19 app in England and Wales should benefit from the same arrangement next month.

So how does it work?

If, for example, a user of the Protect Scotland app travels from Glasgow to Belfast and has close contact with someone using the Northern Irish app, they will get an alert if that person later tests positive for Covid-19.

That's because the three territories are using what is described as a federated server, where the details of positive test results can be stored.

Each app user's phone in Northern Ireland, Scotland or Jersey continually queries that server, and if it spots the anonymous record of someone with whom there has been a contact, they should receive an exposure notification. That may send them into isolation.

The interoperability means that users do not have to install another app when they travel. The Scottish government says an agreement has been reached so that the NHS Covid-19 app used in England and Wales will join the federated server in early November. Users of Gibraltar's contact tracing app will join the system at the same time.

Interoperability


The Department of Health in England confirmed that it was working on making the NHS app interoperable.

A spokesperson said: "We are taking a phased approach to deliver this with Scotland, Northern Ireland and Jersey connecting first and the NHS Covid-19 app in England and Wales connecting shortly after, once we have all the necessary technical and security measures in place."

The Northern Ireland app works across the Irish border, sharing positive test results with Ireland's Covid Tracker app. The Irish software company NearForm helped develop both apps, along with the Protect Scotland app and several now launched in the United States.

But for now there will not be interoperability between the Irish health service's app and the contact-tracing applications in Scotland, England and Wales.

The Scottish government has also revealed that its app, which has been downloaded 1.5 million times since its launch last month, has sent out more than 10,000 notifications to people telling them they have had close contact with someone infected with the virus and must self-isolate.

The anonymous nature of this and other apps which use the Apple Google toolkit means that it is impossible to know who those people are or whether they have obeyed the instruction.

More than 18 million people have downloaded the NHS Covid-19 app since it was launched. But so far no data has been released about the number of alerts it has sent out.


An anonymous contact tracer told the BBC they'd only made one call and were "paid to sit there"


Newsletter

Related Articles

Scotland Times
0:00
0:00
Close
UK Island Orkney council to look at proposals to become territory of Norway
Woman Awarded Over £100,000 After Being Fired for Transgender Tweet
A provocative study suggests: Left-Wing Extremism and its Unsettling Connection to Psychopathy and Narcissism
A Real woman
Brand new security footage has just been released to the public showing the Active shooter Audrey Elizabeth Hale drove to Covenant Church School in her Honda Fit this morning, parked, and shot her way into the building
China's foreign ministry branch in Hong Kong urges British gov't to stop the biased and double standards Hong Kong report
Double standards: UK lawmakers attack EU chief over Ireland claims
Democracy? Not for UK. UK PM rejects Scottish independence referendum, cancel democracy in BVI
UK urged to brace for economic storm
Women's own body dissatisfaction appears to influence their judgment of other women's body sizes
Prince William To Move Family Into Cottage Near Queen Elizabeth II
BOOOOOOS: Tony Blair receives royal honour
Captured Britons sentenced to death in Ukraine
Barbados PM Mia A. Mottley among Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People
Today's headlines
"Just One Of the Boys In School:" Years That Shaped Prince Charles
BVI Premier Rubbishes Claim Of Causing COI Delay
Comments on "Human Intelligence in a Digital Age" - A brilliant Speech by MI6 Chief Richard Moore, and the elephants neglected in the room
Bitcoin: BoE Deputy Gov wants to cancel democracy and protect the banks with regulations which infringe on people’s freedom, independence and benefits they get from their own money.
What are the Pandora Papers?
Taiwan-China relations at their 'worst in 40 years'
The attempt to hold Epik.com accountable for the content of its clients' websites is like blaming Gutenberg for the NYT's fake news that dragged the US into the pointless war against the nuclear weapons Iraq never had
×