man using smartphone

Contact Tracing App: Why it won’t work on certain phones

Older phones may not have the Bluetooth capability to allow the NHSX Contact Tracing App to work.

Although 55,000 downloads have been achieved since it launched on the Isle of Wight last week, some residents have been unable to make the App work.

One reader told OnTheWight that his wife’s smartphone (a brand new Samsung Galaxy S10e),

“Packed up immediately after downloading the Isle of Wight Coronavirus Tracing App! All she gets is ‘not registered on network’.

“The Internet is still working, but no outbound or inbound calls or texts.”

Dr Geraint Lewis, NHS England’s chief data officer, told the press yesterday (Sunday) the NHS is urgently trying to make it available to those phones which cannot support the App.

Why it might not work
Dr Lewis said:

“There are three elements to it — we had to start with some of the most common phones first and we are working our way through the list.

“Secondly,  if the physical phone itself is very old, it might not have the low energy Bluetooth function within it [to make the App work] and there is nothing we can do about that.

“The third reason is the operating system might be old. The App supports systems 8 and above for Androids and iOS 11 and above. If is it the operating system that is a problem, we can advise people to update their phones.”

Intention to continually improve
He went on to say,

“Like any high-quality App, the intention is for it to improve over time.

“For example, things like Facebook continue to update overnight and it is continually learning and improving and that is what we are proposing to do here.

“And that is what Islanders are able to help us with.

“For example they might find the way we phrase something is a bit confusing so we can change the wording and make it a bit simpler to understand its purpose.”

There still remains queries over how the app works and whether data will really be kept private.

Lewis: NHS looks after people’s very private details
Dr Lewis said:

“The way the App works, the user data is completely anonymous up until the point where you want to order a test kit, at which point you have to give us the contact details so we know where to send the test.

“All of the legal protections people would expect, such as GDPR, all of those things apply as well as the same protections we have in place for any NHS data set.

“The NHS looks after people’s very private details and we have established ways of dealing with that.”

‘Mothballed’ until next pandemic
When the Coronavirus pandemic is over, the App will be removed from the App stores and people asked to delete it from their phones.

Dr Lewis added,

“It may be better to think about ‘mothballing’ it, just in case another pandemic were to come back in the future.

“Then we can hit the ground running because we will have all of the intellectual property available in the NHS App.”

Simon Bryant, director of Public Health for the Isle of Wight, said there will be a lot of learning from it that might be helpful.


This article is from the BBC’s LDRS (Local Democracy Reporter Service) scheme, which OnTheWight is taking part in. Some alterations and additions may be been made by OnTheWight. Ed

Image: esthervargasc under CC BY 2.0