Upgrading to iPhone 12 causes issues for UK NHS COVID-19 app users

Posted:
in iOS
Users of the UK's NHS COVID-19 contact tracing app have run into problems when trying to upgrade to the iPhone 12 or iPhone 12 Pro, with the app not prompting users to turn on Exposure Notifications after transferring it from the old device.




A number of iPhone 12 users in England and Wales who upgraded to the just-released models from an older iPhone have encountered error messages when they try to open the official NHS COVID-19 app. Users who perform an automated installation of in-use apps from their old iPhone to the new unit, such as via an iCloud Backup, may encounter errors when trying to run the app after the transfer takes place.

An error is displayed advising to users the app couldn't be run due to a "restriction in your settings" or that another app is using the same technology and is stopping it from working, the BBC reports. The NHS app's Twitter account further confused matters by pointing some users to its support pages containing a list of compatible devices, one that doesn't list the iPhone 12.

It has been found that the problem lies in the app failing to prompt the user to turn on Exposure Notifications on their new smartphone, a prompt that would normally appear the first time the app is installed in the form of a permission request. As a transferred app doesn't ask permission, it displays a somewhat unhelpful error instead.

Users can re-enable the notifications by heading to the Settings app, selecting Notifications, then Exposure Notifications, then tapping Allow Notifications.

While the official guidance has been lacking, some users have engineered their own solution, by deleting the app from their device and reinstalling it. While the technique works, doing so also deletes all of the app's collected data, including any other detected devices and places the user checked into using the app, which may hamper contact tracing efforts in the near future, if the user had been exposed to COVID-19 in some way.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 10
    More than the omproved camera, pseudo 5G, the supposed MagSafe advantages and the complexity around the Covid-19 API,  the world needs simple 1.5 meter detection to save the worldwide economy.
    Apple/Samsung/Google and other Silicon Vallye tech companies denying that should be ashamed
  • Reply 2 of 10
    JFC_PAJFC_PA Posts: 932member
    Not all that hard. 

    “ It has been found that the problem lies in the app failing to prompt the user to turn on Exposure Notifications on their new smartphone, a prompt that would normally appear the first time the app is installed in the form of a permission request. As a transferred app doesn't ask permission, it displays a somewhat unhelpful error instead. 


    Users can re-enable the notifications by heading to the Settings app, selecting Notifications, then Exposure Notifications, then tapping Allow Notifications. ”
    edited October 2020 Rayz2016
  • Reply 3 of 10
    fred1fred1 Posts: 1,112member
    Is there any reliable information on how successful these COVID tracking apps have been?
    cat52
  • Reply 4 of 10
    “It has been found that the problem lies in the app failing to prompt the user to turn on Exposure Notifications on their new smartphone, a prompt that would normally appear the first time the app is installed in the form of a permission request.”

    NOPE!  2 of us had the same problem.  The first thing we checked was those settings.  They were set correctly.  We disabled them then enabled them again .  And still it wouldn’t work.  The only thing that worked was to delete the app and reinstall it.  And when we did that there was no prompts asking to turn exposure notifications on, because they were already set.

    PetrolDavechia
  • Reply 5 of 10
    Yet another example of UK NHS IT not being properly tested - people change their phones throughout the year not only when a new model is released!
  • Reply 6 of 10
    A friend reset some of the settings on their phone the other day, whilst trying to solve a separate issue. Turns out Google Maps doesn’t notice that it has lost Location permissions. You have to uninstall and reinstall it to trigger the prompt for that, too.

    So not just NHSX developers forgetting to check that you’ve got the permission you think you have.
  • Reply 7 of 10
    This actually has been a bug that's been around for several versions of iOS. It happened to me a few years ago when restoring from a backup. The research app wouldn't ask permissions because it thought it already had them, and nothing except deleting and reinstalling the HEALTH app and deleting my Health data in iCloud would fix it. So it's not just exposure notifications, it's one of several permissions such as health data and location, as Jrg_uk has stated too. So basically I had to delete all my accomplishments, medals, and actual health data permanently in order to get the research app permissions to prompt again.
  • Reply 8 of 10
    fred1fred1 Posts: 1,112member
    Found an answer to my question about the effectiveness of these COVID apps, at least in the UK: no one knows:
    https://www.digitalhealth.net/2020/10/major-questions-unanswered-about-effectiveness-of-nhs-covid-19-app/



  • Reply 9 of 10
    fred1 said:
    Is there any reliable information on how successful these COVID tracking apps have been?
    See post from Fred1 above.


    edited October 2020
  • Reply 10 of 10
    There is no “UK NHS COVID” app. The app in this article is for England and Wales. Northern Ireland and Scotland have their own, completely different contact tracing apps that were released before England and Wales got theirs. 
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