The central and local governments are quickly sending emergency alerts on areas hit by the COVID-19 outbreak. This photo taken on March 5 shows text messages sent to residents of Yongin, Gyeonggi-do Province, from the city's municipal government since the first confirmed case was reported there on Feb. 21. (Kim Sunjoo)
The central and local governments are sending daily real-time alerts on the number of confirmed cases of
COVID-19 and the travel histories of those infected via text messages and information posted on
websites.
The Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasure Headquarters under the Korean Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention also holds two briefings per day on the situation.
The transparent and swift provision of this information has allowed the development of mobile apps and
websites easing public access to such data, something that has consequently helped stem the spread of
COVID-19.
Launched on Feb. 11, Corona 100m (Co100) is Korea's most popular mobile app related to the outbreak. It
alerts users when they come within 100 meters of a spot visited by an infected person.
Boasting a million downloads in its first ten days after launch, the app allows users to conveniently
avoid potentially dangerous locations without checking the travel histories of those infected.
Among websites, Coronamap (https://coronamap.site/) shows the travel histories of confirmed COVID-19
patients and Coronaita (https://coronaita.com/#/) provides information on coronavirus-hit areas like a
search engine.
In addition to providing information on COVID-19, the government is also informing the public about
protective masks sold through public channels amid the nationwide shortage of masks.
The Ministry of Science and ICT on March 10 said data on protective masks sold to the public comes out
daily at 7 p.m. It added that the government's provision of needed information to the public and people
developing services reflecting practical demand for the given data have formed a model of public-private
cooperation.
Data on protective masks sold through public channels are being jointly provided by the ministry, the
Ministry of the Interior and Safety, the Ministry of Health and Welfare, and small and medium venture
companies through an open application programming interface provided by the cloud service of the Korean
web portal Naver.
By Song Baleun and Kim Minji /Mar 10, 2020 / Korea.net