Heather Meador and Anna Herber-Downey use dating apps on the job 鈥 and their boss knows it.
Both are public health nurses employed by in eastern Iowa. They鈥檝e learned that dating apps are the most efficient way to inform users that people they previously met on the sites may have exposed them to sexually transmitted infections.
A nationwide surge in STIs, also known as STDs 鈥 with reported cases of gonorrhea and syphilis , respectively, from 2019 to 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 鈥 isn鈥檛 sparing Iowa. The duo has found that the telephone call, a traditional method of contact tracing, no longer works well.
鈥淲hen I started 12 years ago, we called everyone,鈥 said Meador, the county health department鈥檚 clinical branch supervisor. 鈥淚t鈥檚 getting harder and harder to just call someone on the phone.鈥
Even texting is ineffective, they said. And people aren鈥檛 necessarily answering messages on Facebook. The dating apps are where they鈥檙e at.
Because many people are meeting sex partners online 鈥 via sites like Grindr or Snapchat, which are headquartered in West Hollywood and Santa Monica, California, respectively 鈥 contact tracers often don鈥檛 have much information to go on, just a screen name or a picture.
So, about a year ago, Meador and her colleagues got approval from their bosses at the local level to build profiles on the app, through which they can contact the sex partners of infected people.
Traditionally, contact tracers interview people infected with an STI about their recent encounters and then reach out to those partners to tell them about the potential exposure.
Linn County contact tracers use the apps throughout their workday. Grindr, in particular, relies on geolocation, showing users matches who are close by. So the tracers use the apps when they鈥檙e out and about, hoping to wander into the same neighborhoods as the person diagnosed with an STI. Sometimes users 鈥渢ap鈥 the contract tracers to see whether they鈥檙e interested 鈥 in dating, that is.
When the public health officials spot someone they鈥檙e looking for, they send a message asking for a call. It鈥檚 a successful method: Herber-Downey estimated they make an initial contact 75% of the time.
Linn County鈥檚 decision to move online comes as STI rates rise nationally, funding to fight them falls, and people adopt new technologies to meet people and seek fun. 鈥淪TIs are increasing way faster than the funding we have,鈥 said , director of prevention programs for the National Coalition of STD Directors, all while public health departments 鈥 many underfunded 鈥 are grappling with new behaviors.
鈥淪ocial media companies have billions; we have tens of thousands,鈥 said , a University of Southern California public health professor, who previously served as San Francisco鈥檚 director of STD prevention and control services. That funding disparity means few public health departments have staff members who can go online. 鈥淚t鈥檚 only really in major cities that they have anyone who鈥檚 tasked for that,鈥 Klausner said.
Even when departments have enough employees to take on the challenge, institutional support can be lacking. Some public health officials question employees who log into the apps. Klausner once testified on behalf of a Ventura County, California, contact tracer who was fired for using sex sites for work.
But with people migrating online to meet partners, following them there makes sense. 鈥淲e鈥檙e now in a digital age,鈥 Parker said. Individuals might not be out, or might be questioning their identity, making online venues comfortable, anonymous spaces for romance 鈥 which, in turn, means people are harder to reach face-to-face, at least at first.
What鈥檚 more, online spaces like Grindr are effective public health tools beyond contact tracing. They can be useful ways to get the word out about public health concerns.
Parker and the Linn County officials said public service announcements on dating apps 鈥 advocating for condom use or sharing the business hours for sexual health clinics 鈥 do seem to lead people to services. 鈥淲e do have individuals coming in, saying, 鈥業 saw you had free testing. I saw it on Grindr,鈥欌 Parker said.
Grindr, which touts itself as the biggest dating app focused on LGBTQ+ people, pushes out messages and information to its members, said , director of Grindr for Equality. That engagement intensified during a 2015 meningitis outbreak among LGBTQ+ communities in Chicago, for example.
During that outbreak, the app sent citywide messages about vaccination. Then Harrison-Quintana took advantage of the service鈥檚 design: Using the site鈥檚 geolocating capabilities, Grindr workers targeted messages to specific neighborhoods. 鈥淲e could go in and really go block to block and say, 鈥業s this where the cases are showing up?鈥欌 he said. If so, they sent more messages to that area.
That campaign encouraged further efforts from the app, which regularly sends public health messages about everything from covid-19 to monkeypox to the platform鈥檚 base of roughly 11 million monthly users. Grindr also allows users to display their HIV status and indicate whether they鈥檙e vaccinated against covid, monkeypox, and meningitis.
There are a couple of things Grindr won鈥檛 do, however. The company won鈥檛 allow public health departments to create institutional accounts. And it won鈥檛 allow automated notifications about STI exposures to be sent to users.
That鈥檚 due to privacy concerns, the company said, despite calls from public health advocates to deploy better messaging features. Grindr believes that a government presence on the app would be too intrusive and that even anonymous notifications would allow users to trace infections back to their source. (When asked about public health officials who join the site on their own, company spokesperson Patrick Lenihan said: 鈥淚ndividuals are free to say something like 鈥業鈥檓 a public health professional 鈥 ask me about my work!鈥 in their profile and are free to discuss sexual and public health matters however they see fit.鈥)
Grindr鈥檚 position 鈥 however disappointing to some in the public health world 鈥 reflects a longtime balancing act attempted by the private sector, which aims to square government concerns with users鈥 privacy interests.
Klausner pointed to a 1999 syphilis outbreak in San Francisco as one of the first times he saw how those interests could be at odds. The outbreak was traced to an AOL chatroom. Based on his research, Klausner said it seemed as though people could go online and 鈥済et a sex partner faster than you can get a pizza delivered.鈥
But persuading New York-based Time Warner, eventually AOL鈥檚 corporate parent, to cooperate was time-intensive and tricky 鈥 gaining entr茅e into the chatroom required help from the New York attorney general鈥檚 office.
The online industry has advanced since then, Klausner said. He helped one service develop a system to send digital postcards to potentially exposed people. 鈥淐ongratulations, you got syphilis,鈥 the postcards read. 鈥淭hey were edgy postcards,鈥 he said, although some options were less 鈥渟narky.鈥
Overall, however, the dating app world is still 鈥渂ifurcated,鈥 he said. For public health efforts, apps that appeal to LGBTQ+ users are generally more helpful than those that predominantly cater to heterosexual clients.
That鈥檚 due to the community鈥檚 history with sexual health, explained , a leader of Building Healthy Online Communities, a public health group partnering with dating apps. 鈥淔olks in the queer community have 鈥 what 鈥 30, 40 years of thinking about HIV?鈥 she said.
Even though STIs affect everyone, 鈥渢he norm and the expectation is not there鈥 for straight-focused dating apps, she said. Indeed, neither Match Group nor Bumble 鈥 the corporations, both based in Texas, with the biggest apps focused on heterosexual dating 鈥 responded to multiple requests for comment from KHN.
But users, at least so far, seem to appreciate the app-based interventions. Harrison-Quintana said Grindr has landed on a just-the-facts approach to conveying health information. He has never received any backlash, 鈥渨hich has been very nice.鈥
This story was produced by (Kaiser Health News), a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.
(Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.