I was completely wrong, I don’t think their data is subject to this worry. They now have a preprint up. From supplementary methods:
We define daily fever counts as the number of unique users per region that take multiple elevated temperature (37.7 C) readings over the past week, and then normalize these counts by the estimated number of unique users who have used the thermometer over the past year.
So lots of repeat readings shouldn’t affect the gauge, and neither should more of their user base taking readings. Unless they are seeing a lot of new users, or lots of returning users that haven’t used the thermometer in over a year, both of which seem somewhat unlikely, their metric should be fine.
I was completely wrong, I don’t think their data is subject to this worry. They now have a preprint up. From supplementary methods:
So lots of repeat readings shouldn’t affect the gauge, and neither should more of their user base taking readings. Unless they are seeing a lot of new users, or lots of returning users that haven’t used the thermometer in over a year, both of which seem somewhat unlikely, their metric should be fine.