How tech companies can help combat the pandemic and reshape public health Karen DeSalvo

Whitney Pennington Rodgers:
Before we really dive in

to talking specifically
about Google’s work

in the contact tracing space,

let’s first set up the relationship
between public health and tech.

You know, I think a lot of people,

they hear “Google,” and they think of
this big tech company.

They think of a search engine.

And there may be questions about

why does Google
have a chief health officer?

So could you talk a little bit
about your work

and the work your team does?

Karen DeSalvo: Yeah. Well,
maybe I’m the embodiment

of public health and tech coming together.

My background is, I practiced
medicine for 20 years,

though a part of my work
has always been in public health.

In fact, my first job,
putting myself through college,

was working at the state laboratory
in Massachusetts.

As the story will go with Joia [Mukherjee]
we’re reconnected again,

a Massachusetts theme.

And I, across the journey
of the work that I was doing

for my patients

to provide them information

and the right care and meet them
where they were medically,

translated into the work

that I did when I was
the Health Commissioner in New Orleans

and later when I had other roles
in public health practice,

that really is about thinking
of people and community

in the context in which they live
and how we provide the best information,

the best resources,

the best services that are
culturally and linguistically appropriate,

meet them where they are.

And when the opportunity arose
to join the team at Google,

I was really thrilled,

because one of the things
that I have learned across my journey

is that having the right
information at the right time

can make all the difference
in the world.

It can literally save lives.

And billions of people
come to Google every day

asking for information,

and so it is a tremendous opportunity
to have that right information

and those resources to people

so that they can make good choices,

so that they can have
the right information,

so that they can participate
in their own health,

but also, in the context
of this historic pandemic,

be a part of the broader health
of the community,

whether it’s to flatten the curve
or keep the curve flat as we go forward.

WPR: And so it sounds like
that there is this connection, then,

between public health
and what Google’s work is

in thinking about public education
and providing information.

And so could you talk
a little bit about that link

between public health
and public education and Google?

KD: Definitely.

You know, the essential
public health services

include communication and data,

and these are two areas where
tech in general, but certainly Google,

has an opportunity to partner
with the public health system

and with the public
for their health more broadly.

You know, going back
to the earlier days of this pandemic,

towards the end of January,

Google first leaned in to start
to put information out to the public

about how to find resources
in their local community,

from the CDC or from other
authoritative resources.

So on the search page,
we put up “knowledge panels,”

is the way that we describe it,

and we did develop an SOS alert,

which is something
we’ve done for other crises,

and in this particular historic crisis,

we wanted to be certain
that when people went on to search,

that there was authoritative information,

which is always there but certainly
very prominently displayed,

and do that in partnership
with public health authorities.

So we began our journey
really very much in an information way

of making certain that people
knew how to get the right information

at the right time to save lives.

I think the journey for us
over the course of the last few months

has been to continue to lean in
on how we provide information

in partnership with
public health authorities in local areas,

directing people in a certain state
to their state’s health department,

helping people get
information about testing.

There’s also been, though,

a suite of resources that we wanted
to provide to the health care community,

whether that was for health care providers
that may not have access to PPE,

for example,

we did a partnership
with the CDC Foundation.

Though the scale of the company

and the opportunity for us
to partner with public health

around things like helping public health
understand if their blunt policies

around social distancing
to flatten the curve

were actually having an impact
on behavior in the community.

That’s our community mobility reports.

We were asked by public health agencies
all across the world,

including some of
my colleagues here in the US,

could we help them have a better
evidence-based way to understand

the policies around social distancing
or shelter in place?

Which I think we’ll talk about more later.

In addition to that sort of work,
also been working to support public health

in this really essential work
they’re doing for contact tracing,

which is very human-resource intensive,

very complex,

incredibly important
to keep the curve flat

and prevent future outbreaks,

and give time and space for health care
and, importantly, science

to do the work they need to do
to create treatments

and, very importantly, a vaccine.

So that work around providing
an additional set of digital tools,

exposure notification
for the contact tracing community,

is one of the other areas where we’ve
been supporting the public health.

So we think, as we’ve thought
about this pandemic,

it’s support the users,
which is the consumer.

There’s also a health care system
and a scientific community

where we’ve been partnering.

And then, of course, public health.

And for me, I mean, Whitney,
this is just a wonderful opportunity

for Big Tech to come together
with the public health infrastructure.

Public health, as Joia was
sort of articulating before,

is often an unsung hero.

It saves your life every day,
but you didn’t know it.

And it is also a pretty under-resourced
part of our health infrastructure,

globally, but especially in the US.

It’s something I worked on a lot
before I came to Google.

And so the opportunity to partner

and do everything
that we can as a company

and, in this case, with contact tracing
in partnership with Apple

to create a very privacy-promoting,
useful, helpful product

that is going to be a part
of the bigger contact tracing

is something that we feel really proud of

and look forward to continuing
to work with public health.

In fact, we were on the phone this morning
with a suite of public health groups

from across the country,

listening again to what would be helpful
questions that they have.

And as we think about
rolling out the system,

this is the way that we’ve been
for the last many months at Google,

and I’m just really …

I landed at a place just a few months
ago – I just started at Google –

where we can have an impact
on what people know

all across the world.

And I’ll tell you, as a public
health professional and as a doc,

that is one of the most critical things.

People need to have the right information

so they can help navigate
their health journey,

but also especially in this pandemic
because it’s going to save lives.

WPR: That’s great. Thank you.

So, to talk more about
this contact tracing system

and the exposure notification app,

we’ve read so much about this.

Could you describe this,
a little bit about how the app works,

what exactly are users seeing,

what information is being collected?

Just give us sort of a broad sense
of what this app does.

KD: Yeah.

Let me just start
by explaining what it is,

and it’s actually not even an app,

it’s just an API.

It’s a system that allows
a public health agency

to create an app,

and only the API,
this doorway to the phone system,

is available to public health.

So it’s not designed for any other purpose

than to support public health
and the work that they’re doing

in COVID-19 in contact tracing.

The second piece of this
is that we wanted to build a system

that was privacy-promoting,

that really put the user first,

gave them the opportunity
to opt into the system

and opt out whenever
they wanted to do that,

so they also have some control
over how they’re engaging

and using their phone, basically,

as a part of keeping the curve
flat around the world.

The system was developed in response
to requests that we were getting

about how could technology,
particularly smartphones,

be useful in contact tracing?

And as we thought this through
and talked with public health experts

and academics and privacy experts,

it was pretty clear that obviously
contract tracing is a complex endeavor

that does require human resources,

because there’s a lot
of very particular things

that you need to do
in having conversations with people

as part of contact tracing.

On the other hand,

there’s some opportunity
to better inform the contact investigators

with things like, particularly,
an exposure log.

So one of the things that happens
when the contact tracer calls you

or visits you is they ask,

“Hey, in the last certain number of days,”

and in the case of COVID, it would be
a couple days before symptoms developed,

“Hey, tell us the story of what
you’ve been involved in doing

so that we can begin to think through
where you might have been,

to the grocery or to church
or what other activities

and with whom you might
have been into contact.”

There’s some amount of recall bias
in that for all us,

like we forget where we might have been,

and there’s also an amount
of anonymous contact.

So there are times when
we’re out in the world,

on a bus or in a store,

and we may have come into prolonged
and close contact with someone

and wouldn’t know who they were.

And so the augmentation

that the exposure
notification system provides

is designed to fill in those gaps

and to expedite the notification
to public health

of who has a positive test,

because the person would have notified,

they trigger something
that notifies public health,

and then to fill in some of those gaps
in the prior exposure.

What it does not do is it does not use
GPS or location to track people.

So the system actually uses
something different

called Bluetooth Low Energy,

which is privacy-preserving,

it doesn’t drain the battery

and it makes it more also interoperable

between both Apple and the Android system

so it’s more useful,
not only in the US context,

but globally.

So we built this system
in response to some requests

to help augment
the contact-tracing systems.

We wanted to do it in a way
that was user-controlled

and privacy-preserving

and had technological features

that would allow public health
to augment the exposure log

in a way that would accelerate
the work that they needed to get done

to interrupt transmission –
keep the R naught less than one –

and do that in a way that we would also
be able to partner with public health

to think about risk scoring.

We could talk more about
any of these areas that you want,

but I think maybe

one of the most important things
that I want to say, Whitney,

is how grateful Apple and Google are –

I’ll take a moment to speak
for my colleagues at Apple –

to the great partnership
from public health across the world

and to academics and to others

who have helped us think through
how this can be,

how the exposure notification system

fits into the broader
contact tracing portfolio,

and how it does it in a way
that really respects and protects privacy

and also is useful to public health.

We’re still on this journey with them,

and I really believe that
we’re going to be able to help,

and I’m looking forward
to being a part of the great work

that public health’s got to do
on the front lines every day,

been doing, frankly,

but needs to be able to step up.

WPR: That’s great, and thank you
for that really detailed explanation.

And you know, we actually have Chris here
with some questions from our community,

so why don’t we turn there really quickly.

Chris Anderson: Yep.
Questions pouring in, Karen.

Here’s one from Vishal Gurbuxani.

Uh … Gurbu –

I’ve pronounced that horribly wrong,
but make up your own mind.

Vishal, we’ll connect later
and you can tell me how to say that.

KD: Fabulous last name. I love that.
That’s a Scrabble word.

CA: “Given where we are today,

how should employees think about
returning to work,

with so many conflicting messages?”

KD: This has been an important part
of my work for the last few months.

I joined Google in December,
and all this started happening.

The pandemic in the world
first began in November

but it got very hot
in many parts of the world

in the last few months,

and we’ve been thinking a lot
about how to protect Googlers

but also protect the community.

I’ve been talking a lot about
what we’ve done externally.

You know, internally,
Google made a decision

to go to work-from-home pretty early.

We believed that we could.

We believed that in all the places
across the world where we have offices,

that the more we could not only model

but frankly just be
a part of flattening the curve,

that we would be good citizens.

So we have been fairly …

I don’t know if the right word
is conservative or assertive, about it,

because we really wanted to make sure
that we were doing everything we could

just to get people to shelter in place
and socially distance.

A lot of other companies
have been doing the same,

and I think the choices
that people are making

are going to be predicated
on a whole array of factors:

the rates of local transmission;

governmental expectations;

the ability to work from home;

the individual characteristics
of the workers themselves,

how much risk they might have
or how much risk it would be

for them to bring that back
into their household

if they have people
living in their household

who would be at increased risk
from morbidity, mortality,

from suffering and death, from COVID.

So these are individual
and local considerations.

I think for us as a company, we want
to, as we’ve talked about publicly,

we want to continue to be a part
of the public health solution

around social distancing,

and so that for us means
continuing to encourage work-from-home

for our employees

and really only be in if it’s essential
that people are in the workplace.

And we’ve said publicly that we’re going
to be doing that for many months to come.

Now, here’s one thing I do want to say,

which is,

working from home
has definite benefits,

not only for the pandemic,

but for some people,
time for commute, etc.

I think we’re already learning
there are some downsides,

and there are generic downsides,

even just not from work-from-home
but school-from-home

and just being at home,

which is: social isolation is real.

It causes depression.

It has physical impacts
on people’s bodies;

there’s science around this.

So as the world is weighing,

even beyond the pandemic,

when we’ve achieved herd immunity

because we’ve been able
to vaccinate the world

with a functioning vaccine
that creates immunity,

I think probably a lot of workplaces

are going to want
to encourage work-from-home.

But I just want us also to remember
that part of humanity is community,

and so we’ll have to be thinking through
how we balance those activities.

CA: And, of course, there are
huge swathes of the economy

that can’t work from home.

We’re a lucky few who can.

And speaking of which,
here’s a question from Otho Kerr.

“Vulnerable communities
seem to be receiving

a disproportionate amount
of misinformation.

What is Google doing

to help make sure these communities
are receiving accurate news

rather than fake news?”

KD: You know, vulnerable communities
is where I have spent

most of my career focused.

I think with many things
that we’ve learned as a society

in this pandemic

were things that we,
frankly, should have known.

And before I get to the information,
I’ll just talk about access to services,

which is to say, and to brag, I guess,
on my hometown of New Orleans.

One of the early things
that New Orleans learned,

or remembered or whatever,

was that drive-through testing
only works if you have a car.

So you need walk-up testing,
and it needs to be in the neighborhood.

We need to meet people where they are,

and it’s thematic of all the work that we
did after Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans

was to build back a health care
and public health infrastructure

that was community-oriented,
built with community not for community.

Of all the many things that I really
do hope last from this pandemic,

one of them, though, is that
we’re being much more conscious

of building with especially
vulnerable communities

and building out policies and processes

that are as inclusive as possible.

For Google information,
we start with,

on the search platform, for example,

adding up knowledge panels,

that we spend time making sure are
linguistically and culturally appropriate.

We tend to start globally,

with global authoritative groups
like the World Health Organization

or the National Health Service or CDC,

and then we begin to build down
to more focused jurisdictions.

On other platforms
that we have like YouTube,

we’ve built out special channels

where we do, because
it’s a platform and we can host content,

we’ve partnered with creatives –

we call them, I don’t know,
that’s a new thing for me

because I’m a doctor –

but we’ve partnered
with creatives and influencers

whose reach resonates with communities.

We have had particular programming,
for example, for seniors,

African-Americans,

so “vulnerable” takes on
a lot of meaning for us

globally and in the US context.

Our work is not done,

and we certainly every day are thinking
about how we can do more

to see that the information is accessible,

accurate

and also, frankly, interesting
so that people want to engage.

CA: Yeah.

Alright, thank you Karen.

I’ll be back in a bit
with some other questions.

WPR: Thank you, Chris.

And you know, and this is really
wonderful talking about

more broadly, where you see
tech and public health going,

and specifically, talking about
these vulnerable communities.

And I think one thing,
even just beyond Google,

it would be interesting
to sort of hear your thoughts

on where you see tech in general
better serving public health,

if there are spaces that you think,

no matter which tech company
we’re talking about,

we could all sort of come together
to better serve the community.

Do you have any thoughts on that?

KD: I could spend several hours
talking to you about that,

but maybe I’ll just start by saying

that I came to tech

through the pathway
of direct patient care

and public health service
in local community,

and I ended up in a role
in the federal government

as the National Coordinator for Health IT,

which, for my background,
felt unusual to me,

I’m just being honest.

And I thought, well,
I’m not really a tech person,

but the secretary at the time said,

“That’s exactly why we need you,
because we need to apply tech.”

And she had had the unfortunate experience
of hearing me chirp about

how public health needed more timely data
to make better evidence-based policy

on behalf of community and with community.

This was a source of frustration for me
as a local public health officer,

that sometimes the data
I was working on, though great,

was stale by the time
I needed to make decisions

about chronic disease interventions,
or mental health or even violence

or intimate partner violence issues

in my community.

And so the desire to make data
useful and accessible

to support people in communities

is something that’s been
burning in me for a long time,

and what I have learned
since I have been out in Silicon Valley

is that that desire burns
in the bellies of many people

who work at Google and Apple
and other companies,

and it’s been really wonderful to see,

during this horrible time of the pandemic,

the incredibly brilliant
engineering and programming

and other minds at a company like Google

turn their attention on
how can we partner with consumers

and with public health
to do the right thing,

to bring the resources
that we have to bear.

And I said I could talk all day about it
because I have many examples

from the work that we have done at Google.

Maybe I’ll just point out a couple.

One is to say that

we very early on wanted to find
a crisp way to help people understand

what they could do to protect
themselves and their community,

to flatten the curve,
get the R naught less than one,

and this “Do the Five” work
that our teams, largely in marketing

but then a lot of other people weighed in.

It required massive amounts of talent

to make that available
on our landing page, on search,

and then fold it out more broadly.

We did that in partnership
with the World Health Organization,

then the CDC, then with countries
all across the world

to get simple messaging
about staying home if you can

and coughing into your elbow,
washing your hands.

These are basic public health messages

that public health has been,
frankly, even in flu season

trying to get the word out,

but it became,

the resources at a company like a Google,

and the reach to billions,

it’s a platform and a set of talents

that aren’t even the technical,
computer vision kind of stuff

that you would typically think about.

Many other companies in Silicon Valley
have weighed in in the same way.

I think similarly,
we’ve been thinking through

how we can use tools like
the community mobility reports.

This is something,

a business backer
like we have for restaurants.

The engineers and scientists said,

what if we applied that to retail
and grocery stores and transportation

to get a snapshot in a community

of whether people
were using those areas less,

whether people were adhering
to local public health expectations

and sheltering in place,

and give that information
not only to public health

but to the public

to help inspire them
to do more for their community

as well as for themselves.

So there has been, I think
what I’m trying to say, Whitney,

is I think there’s a natural marriage,

and COVID has been an accelerant use case
to demonstrate how that can work,

and it is my expectation
that companies like Google

who, certainly for us it’s in our DNA
to be involved in health,

will want to continue
working on this going forward,

because it’s really not just good for what
we need to get done in this pandemic,

but public health and prevention

are part and parcel
of how we create opportunity

and equity in all communities
across the world.

So I’m passionate about
the work of public health

and very passionate about partnership.

Can I just say one more thing?

WPR: Absolutely.

KD: Which is to say

that one of the first things that I did
before the pandemic started,

I had just started in December,

and then in January, I did
a listening session with consumers

about what they wanted,

and they said something
kind of similar to what you said,

which I just want to call out,

and that is,

they wanted partnership,
they wanted transparency

and they really felt like
there was quite a lot

that tech in general could do

to help them on their health journey.

But their ask was that we did it
in a transparent way

and we did it in a partnered
way with them.

And so as we move out of the pandemic,
and we’re thinking more about consumers,

I want to carry some of this spirit also

of prevention and helpfulness

and transparency

into the work that we’re going to continue
to do for people every day.

Whitney Pennington Rodgers:
在我们真正深入

讨论谷歌

在接触者追踪领域的工作之前,

让我们首先建立
公共卫生和科技之间的关系。

你知道,我认为很多人

听到“谷歌”,就会想到
这家大型科技公司。

他们想到了一个搜索引擎。

可能会有人质疑

为什么谷歌
会有首席卫生官?

那么你能
谈谈你

的工作和你的团队所做的工作吗?

凯伦·德萨尔沃:是的。 好吧,
也许我

是公共卫生和科技结合的体现。

我的背景是,我
行医 20 年,

尽管我的一部分工作
一直是公共卫生。

事实上,
我读完大学

的第一份工作是在马萨诸塞州的州立实验室工作

随着故事将与 Joia [Mukherjee] 一起进行,
我们再次重新连接,这

是马萨诸塞州的主题。

而我,在
我为我的病人做的工作的过程中

,为他们提供信息

和正确的护理,并在他们就医的地方与
他们会面,

转化

为我
在新奥尔良和后来担任卫生专员时所做的工作

当我
在公共卫生实践中担任其他角色时,

这实际上是
在人们和社区

的生活环境中思考他们
,以及我们如何提供最好的信息

、最好的资源、


文化和语言上合适的最好的服务,

满足他们 他们在哪里。

当有机会
加入 Google 团队时,

我真的很激动,

因为
我在整个旅程中学到的一件事

是,在正确的时间获得正确的
信息

可以
改变世界。

它可以从字面上拯救生命。

每天都有数十亿人
来谷歌

寻求信息

,所以这是一个巨大的机会
,可以为人们提供正确的信息

和资源,

这样他们就可以做出正确的选择,

这样他们就
可以获得正确的信息,

这样他们就可以 可以
参与自己的健康,

而且在
这场历史性大流行的背景下,

成为社区更广泛健康的一部分

无论是在我们前进的过程中拉平曲线
还是保持曲线平坦。

WPR:所以听起来

在公共卫生
与谷歌

在考虑公共教育
和提供信息方面的工作之间存在这种联系。

那么你能谈谈

公共卫生
和公共教育与谷歌之间的联系吗?

KD:当然。

你知道,基本的
公共卫生服务

包括通信和数据,

而这两个领域的
技术一般来说,但肯定是谷歌,

有机会
与公共卫生系统

以及
更广泛地与公众合作,以促进他们的健康。

要知道,
回到这场大流行的早期,

在 1 月底,

谷歌首先
开始向公众发布

有关如何
在当地社区

、CDC 或其他
权威资源中寻找资源的信息 .

所以在搜索页面上,
我们设置了“知识面板”

,这是我们描述它的方式

,我们确实开发了一个 SOS 警报,

这是
我们为其他危机所做的事情

,在这场特殊的历史性危机中,

我们想要
确定当人们继续搜索时

,有权威信息,

这些信息始终存在,但肯定
非常显眼,


与公共卫生当局合作进行。

因此,
我们以一种信息化的方式开始了我们的旅程,以

确保人们
知道如何

在正确的时间获得正确的信息以挽救生命。

我认为
过去几个月我们

的旅程是继续
依靠我们如何


当地公共卫生当局合作提供信息,

将某个州的人们引导
到他们所在州的卫生部门,

帮助人们 获取
有关测试的信息。

不过,我们还想

向医疗保健社区提供一套资源,

无论是
针对可能无法获得 PPE 的医疗保健提供者,

例如,

我们与 CDC 基金会建立了合作伙伴关系

尽管公司的规模

以及我们
与公共卫生部门合作的机会,

比如帮助公共卫生部门
了解他们为拉平曲线而采取的

关于保持社交距离的生硬政策

是否实际上对社区行为产生了影响

这是我们的社区流动性报告。

世界各地的公共卫生机构,

包括
我在美国的一些同事,

都向我们询问,我们能否帮助他们以更好的
循证方式来了解

有关保持社交距离
或避难所的政策?

我想我们稍后会讨论更多。

除了这类工作之外,他们
还在为接触者追踪所做

的这项非常重要的工作中努力支持公共卫生

这是非常人力资源密集型的,

非常复杂,

对于保持曲线平坦

和防止未来爆发非常重要 ,

并为医疗保健和重要的科学提供时间和空间

来完成他们需要做的工作,
以创造治疗方法

,非常重要的是,疫苗。

因此,围绕提供
一组额外的数字工具、

接触者追踪社区的接触通知,

是我们一直支持公共卫生的其他领域之一

所以我们认为,正如我们考虑
到这种流行病一样,

它支持用户,
也就是消费者。

还有一个医疗保健系统
和一个

我们一直在合作的科学社区。

然后,当然,公共卫生。

对我来说,我的意思是,惠特尼,
这只是

大型科技公司
与公共卫生基础设施合作的绝佳机会。

正如 Joia 之前所说的那样,公共卫生

通常是无名英雄。

它每天都在拯救你的生命,
但你不知道。

全球范围内,尤其是在美国,这也是我们卫生基础设施中资源不足的部分。

这是我在来谷歌之前做了很多工作的事情

因此,

作为一家公司,我们有机会合作并尽我们所能

,在这种情况下,
与 Apple 合作进行接触者追踪,

以创建一个非常保护隐私、
有用、有用的产品

,它将成为更大的一部分
接触者追踪

是我们感到非常自豪的事情,

并期待
继续与公共卫生部门合作。

事实上,我们今天早上
与来自全国各地的一组公共卫生团体通了电话

再次倾听他们提出的有益
问题。

当我们考虑
推出该系统时,

这就是我们
在谷歌过去几个月一直采用的方式,

而我真的……

几个月前我刚刚登陆了一个地方
——我只是 始于谷歌——

在那里我们可以对全世界
人们所知道的产生影响

我会告诉你,作为一名
公共卫生专业人士和一名医生,

这是最关键的事情之一。

人们需要获得正确的信息,

这样他们才能帮助
他们度过健康之旅

,尤其是在这场大流行中,
因为它将拯救生命。

WPR:太好了。 谢谢你。

所以,要更多地谈论
这个接触者追踪系统

和暴露通知应用程序,

我们已经阅读了很多关于这个的内容。

你能描述
一下这个应用程序是如何工作的,

用户究竟看到了

什么,正在收集什么信息?

让我们大致
了解这个应用程序的功能。

KD:是的。

让我
先解释一下它是什么

,它实际上甚至不是一个应用程序,

它只是一个 API。

这是一个
允许公共卫生

机构创建应用程序的系统

,只有 API,
即通往电话系统的门户

,可供公共卫生部门使用。

因此,它的设计目的

不是为了支持公共卫生
以及他们

在 COVID-19 中所做的接触者追踪工作。

第二部分
是我们想要建立一个促进隐私的系统

,真正把用户放在第一位,

让他们有
机会选择加入系统

并在
他们想要这样做时选择退出,

所以他们也有一些
控制他们如何参与

和使用手机,基本上,

作为
在世界各地保持曲线平坦的一部分。

该系统的开发是
为了响应我们所获得的

关于技术
,特别是智能手机如何

在接触者追踪中发挥作用的要求?

当我们深思熟虑
并与公共卫生专家

、学者和隐私专家交谈时,

很明显,
合同追踪显然是一项复杂的工作

,确实需要人力资源,

因为您需要做
很多非常特别的事情

作为接触者追踪的一部分,与人进行对话。

另一方面,

有一些机会
可以更好地告知接触调查

员,特别
是暴露日志。

因此,
当接触追踪者给您打电话

或拜访您时,他们会问:

“嘿,在过去的特定天数内”,

而对于 COVID 而言,
症状出现前几天,

“ 嘿,告诉我们你参与过的事情的故事,

这样我们就可以开始思考
你可能去过哪里,

去杂货店或教堂
或其他活动

,以及你可能与谁
接触过。”

这对我们所有人来说都有一定程度的回忆偏见,

就像我们忘记了自己可能去过哪里一样,

而且还有大量
的匿名联系。

所以有时
我们在外面的世界,

在公共汽车上或在商店里

,我们可能
与某人进行了长时间的密切接触

,但不知道他们是谁。

因此

,暴露
通知系统提供

的增强功能旨在填补这些空白,

并加快
向公共卫生部门

通报谁的检测呈阳性,

因为这个人会通知,

他们会触发一些
通知公共卫生的事情,

然后 填补
之前曝光中的一些空白。

它没有做的是它不使用
GPS 或位置来跟踪人。

因此,该系统实际上使用了
一种不同的东西,

称为低功耗蓝牙,

它可以保护隐私,

它不会耗尽电池电量,

而且它还可以

在 Apple 和 Android 系统之间更好地互操作,

因此它更有用,
不仅在美国环境中 ,

但在全球范围内。

因此,我们构建了这个系统
来响应一些请求,

以帮助
增强联系人跟踪系统。

我们希望以
一种由用户控制

和保护隐私的方式来实现,

具有允许公共卫生

以加快
他们需要完成的工作

以中断传输的方式来增加暴露日志的技术特性——
保持 R naught 小于 1 -

并以我们也
能够与公共卫生

合作考虑风险评分的方式做到这一点。

我们可以更多地谈论
你想要的任何这些领域,

但我想我想说

的最重要的事情
之一,惠特尼,

苹果和谷歌是多么感激——

我会花点时间
来代表我的 Apple 的同事们

——感谢
来自世界各地的公共卫生部门

、学术界和其他

帮助我们思考
如何做到这一点、

暴露通知系统

如何适应更广泛的
接触者追踪产品组合

以及它是如何做到的人
以真正尊重和保护隐私

并且对公共健康有益的方式。

我们仍在与他们一起踏上这段旅程

,我真的相信
我们将能够提供帮助

,我期待
着成为公共卫生必须在前线做的伟大工作的一部分

天,

一直在做,坦率地说,

但需要能够加强。

WPR:太好了,感谢您
提供非常详细的解释。

而且你知道,我们实际上让 Chris 来这里
,向我们的社区提出一些问题,

所以我们为什么不快速转向那里。

克里斯安德森:是的。
问题纷至沓来,凯伦。

这是 Vishal Gurbuxani 的一个。

呃……古尔布——

我说的大错特错,
但你自己决定吧。

Vishal,我们稍后再联系
,你可以告诉我怎么说。

KD:很棒的姓氏。 我喜欢那个。
这是一个拼字游戏。

CA:“鉴于我们今天所处的位置,

员工应该如何考虑
重返工作岗位,

有这么多相互矛盾的信息?”

KD:这
是我过去几个月工作的重要组成部分。

我在 12 月加入了谷歌
,这一切都开始发生了。

全球大流行
始于 11 月,

过去几个月在世界

许多地方变得非常热,我们一直在
思考如何保护 Google 员工,

同时也保护社区。

我一直在谈论
我们在外部所做的事情。

你知道,在内部,
谷歌

很早就决定在家工作。

我们相信我们可以。

我们相信,在
世界各地设有办事处的地方

,我们不仅可以建模,

而且坦率地说,只是
成为拉平曲线的一部分

,我们就会成为好公民。

所以我们一直是公平的……

我不知道这个词
是保守的还是自信的,

因为我们真的想
确保我们正在尽一切

努力让人们在适当的地方避难
并保持社交距离 .

许多其他公司
也在做同样的事情

,我
认为人们做出

的选择将
取决于一系列因素

:本地传播率;

政府期望;

在家工作的能力;

工人本身的个人特征,

他们可能
有多大的风险,或者

如果他们家里有人
居住在他们的家中

,他们
的发病率、死亡率

、 COVID 带来的痛苦和死亡。

所以这些都是个人
和当地的考虑。

我认为,作为一家公司,我们
希望,正如我们公开谈论的那样,

我们希望继续成为围绕社交距离
的公共卫生解决方案的一部分

,因此对我们来说,这意味着
继续鼓励员工工作——

为我们的员工提供家,

并且只有在人们在工作场所必不可少的情况下才真正在家

我们已经公开表示,我们将在未来
几个月内这样做。

现在,我确实想说一件事,

那就是

,在家工作
有明确的好处,

不仅对大流行,

而且对某些人来说,
通勤时间等等。

我认为我们已经知道
有一些缺点,

并且有一些普遍的缺点,

即使不是在家工作,
而是在家上学

,只是呆在家里,

那就是:社会孤立是真实的。

它会导致抑郁。

它对人的身体有物理影响;

这方面有科学依据。

所以当全世界都在权衡,

甚至在大流行之后,

当我们

因为我们已经能够
用一种能产生免疫力的有效疫苗为世界接种疫苗而实现群体

免疫时,

我认为可能很多工作场所


想要鼓励 在家里工作。

但我只是希望我们也记住
人类的一部分是社区

,因此我们必须考虑
如何平衡这些活动。

CA:当然,还有
很多经济

领域无法在家工作。

我们是少数幸运的人。

说到这里,
这是奥托·克尔的一个问题。

“弱势社区
似乎收到

了不成比例
的错误信息。

谷歌正在做些什么

来帮助确保这些
社区收到准确的新闻

而不是假新闻?”

KD:你知道,弱势社区

是我职业生涯大部分时间关注的地方。

我认为,坦率地说,我们
作为一个社会

在这场大流行中学到的

许多东西都是我们
应该知道的。

在我了解这些信息之前,
我将只谈谈对服务的访问

,也就是说,我想
在我的家乡新奥尔良吹嘘。

新奥尔良学到

或记住的早期事情之一

是,
只有在你有车的情况下,免下车测试才有效。

所以你需要步行测试
,它需要在附近。

我们需要在人们所在的地方与他们会面

,我们
在新奥尔良卡特里娜飓风之后所做的所有工作的主题

是重建以社区为导向的医疗保健
和公共卫生基础设施


与社区而不是为社区而建立。

在我
真正希望从这场大流行中持续下去的所有许多

事情中,其中之一是
我们更加

意识到与特别
脆弱的社区

一起建设,并

制定尽可能具有包容性的政策和流程。

对于谷歌信息,
我们首先

在搜索平台上

添加知识面板

,我们花时间确保在
语言和文化上合适。

我们倾向于从全球开始,


世界卫生组织

或国家卫生服务局或疾病预防控制中心等全球权威团体合作,

然后我们开始
建立更集中的司法管辖区。


我们拥有的其他平台上,比如 YouTube,

我们已经建立了

我们做的特殊频道,因为
它是一个平台,我们可以托管内容,

我们与创意合作——

我们称之为,我不知道,
那是 对我来说是新事物,

因为我是一名医生——

但我们
与创意和影响者合作,

他们的影响力与社区产生了共鸣。

例如,我们为老年人、

非裔美国人制定了特定的计划,

因此“易受伤害”
对我们

在全球和美国的背景下具有很多意义。

我们的工作还没有完成

,我们当然每天都在
考虑如何做更多的事情

来确保信息是可访问的、

准确的

,而且坦率地说,也很有趣,
以便人们愿意参与。

CA:是的。

好的,谢谢凯伦。

稍后我会回来
回答一些其他问题。

WPR:谢谢你,克里斯。

而且你知道,

更广泛的角度谈论
科技和公共卫生

,特别是谈论
这些脆弱的社区,这真的很棒。

而且我认为有一件事,
即使只是在谷歌之外,

如果有你认为的空间,无论我们在谈论哪家科技公司
,听听你

对你认为技术在总体上
更好地服务于公共卫生的地方的想法都会很有趣

关于,

我们都可以团结
起来更好地为社区服务。

你对此有什么想法吗?

KD:我可以花几个小时
和你谈谈,

但也许我会先

说我是

通过当地社区
的直接患者护理

和公共卫生服务来接触科技的

,我最终
在 联邦政府

作为健康 IT 的国家协调员

,就我的背景而言,这对我来说
感觉很不寻常,

我只是说实话。

我想,好吧,
我不是真正的技术人员,

但当时的秘书说,

“这正是我们需要你的
原因,因为我们需要应用技术。”

不幸的是,她
听到我

抱怨公共卫生需要更及时的数据
来代表社区和社区制定更好的循证政策

作为当地公共卫生官员,

这让我感到沮丧,有时
我正在处理的数据虽然很棒,但


我需要

就慢性病干预
、心理健康甚至暴力

或亲密关系做出决定时已经过时了

我社区中的伴侣暴力问题。

因此,让数据

对社区中的人们有用和可访问的愿望

是我长期以来一直在燃烧的东西,

自从我离开硅谷以来,我学到的

是,这种愿望
在许多人的肚子里燃烧

在谷歌、苹果
和其他公司工作

的人,很高兴看到,

在这个可怕的大流行时期

,像谷歌这样的公司令人难以置信的出色
工程和编程

以及其他人

将注意力转向
我们如何与我们合作 消费者

和公共卫生
一起做正确的事,

带来我们不得不承担的资源。

我说我可以整天谈论它,
因为我有很多

我们在谷歌所做的工作的例子。

也许我会指出一对。

一个是说

我们很早就想找到
一种清晰的方法来帮助人们

了解他们可以做些什么来保护
自己和他们的社区,

使曲线变平,
让 R 不小于 1

,这就是“做五个”
我们的团队的工作,主要是在营销方面,

但后来有很多其他人参与进来。

它需要大量的人才才能

在我们的登陆页面上提供,在搜索上,

然后更广泛地展开。

我们
与世界卫生组织

、疾病预防控制中心
以及世界各国合作完成了这项工作,

以获取
有关如果可以的话呆在家里

、咳嗽到肘部、
洗手的简单信息。

这些是基本的公共卫生信息


坦率地说,即使在流感季节,公共卫生部门也一直在

努力宣传,

但它变成

了像谷歌这样的公司的资源,

以及数十亿的影响力,

它是一个平台和一套

甚至不是您通常会想到的技术、
计算机视觉类型的人才

硅谷的许多其他公司
也以同样的方式参与进来。

我认为类似地,
我们一直在思考

如何使用
社区流动性报告等工具。

这就是我们为餐馆

提供的商业支持者

工程师和科学家说

,如果我们将其应用于零售
、杂货店和交通,

以了解社区

中人们
是否较少使用这些区域,

人们是否
遵守当地公共卫生期望

并就地避难,

并给予 这些信息
不仅适用于公共卫生,

也适用于公众,

以帮助激励
他们为社区和自己做更多的事情

所以,
我想我想说的是,惠特尼

,我认为这是一种自然的婚姻,

而 COVID 一直是一个加速用例
来展示它是如何运作的

,我
希望像谷歌这样的

公司 ,当然对我们来说,
参与健康是我们的 DNA,

他们希望
继续为此努力,

因为这不仅对
我们在这场大流行中需要做的事情有好处,

而且公共卫生和预防

是不可或缺的一部分
我们如何在世界各地

的所有社区中创造机会和公平

所以我
对公共卫生

工作充满热情,对合作也充满热情。

我可以再说一件事吗?

WPR:当然。

KD:也就是说

,我在大流行开始之前做的第一件事是,

我在 12 月才开始,

然后在 1 月,我
与消费者进行了一次

关于他们想要什么的倾听会议

,他们说了一些
类似的话 类似于你所说的

,我只想说出来

,也就是说,

他们想要合作,
他们想要透明度

,他们真的觉得

一般来说,科技可以做很多事情

来帮助他们的健康之旅。

但他们的要求是,我们
以一种透明的方式

来做这件事,并且我们以与他们合作的方式来做这件事

因此,随着我们摆脱大流行
,我们更多地考虑消费者,

我想将这种

预防、乐于助人

和透明的精神

带入我们将继续
每天为人们做的工作中 .