National Post

England ‘lost’ 16,000 new COVID cases’ data

- William Booth and Teo Armus

LONDON • An epic fail of a simple computer program “lost” nearly 16,000 new coronaviru­s cases in England for more than a week, British public health officials said.

Everyone who tested positive was informed. But the cases were left out of the daily totals between Sept. 25 and Friday and ignored by contact tracers during that time.

Given the average number of in- person contacts, that means as many as 50,000 people may have been exposed without being called about it.

By Monday morning, only half of the 16,000 who tested positive had got a contact tracing call.

The other half “should be contacted as soon as possible,” said Health Secretary Matt Hancock, who was excoriated in the House of Commons by lawmakers.

T he accounting error — blamed on operators entering data in an Excel spreadshee­t program — was another serious stumble for the British government, at a crucial moment, when it is daily trying to decide where to tighten regional restrictio­ns to slow a second wave of the virus.

After the error was spotted and the lost cases accounted for, the government’s report of new daily infections nearly doubled — from 12,872 on Saturday to 22,961 on Sunday — sparking renewed angst among officials in London and England’s north, where most of the new cases were centred.

Michael Brodie, the interim head of Public Health England, said the issue was identified late Friday in the computer process that communicat­es positive results from labs to the country’s reporting dashboards. Some data files containing positive results had exceeded the maximum file size, he said, according to the BBC.

“We fully understand the concern this may cause,” Brodie added, “and further robust measures have been put in place as a result.”

While health authoritie­s said the glitch had not affected the pandemic response at the local level, 10 Downing Street announced an investigat­ion and politician­s in the opposition described the episode as “shambolic.”

“This isn’t just a shambles. It’s so much worse than this and it gives me no comfort to say it, but it’s putting lives at risk,” Labour Party lawmaker Jonathan Ashworth told Parliament.

Liverpool Mayor Joe Anderson told the Guardian newspaper the missing data was the latest in a “pandemic of incompeten­ce from the government.”

Anderson said, “There are mistakes and there are really serious mistakes. This is a highly significan­t mistake that tells me the system is not fit for purpose.”

Paul Hunter, a professor of health protection at the University of East Anglia, told BBC Radio, “I think the thing that surprised me was the size of it — almost 16,000 results — going missing over the course of a week is quite alarming, I think.”

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