The Sunday Telegraph

Resistance to trace scheme likely, admits health chief

Majority will comply, but NHS expects some people will be reluctant to go into self-isolation after tracking

- By Tom Morgan

SOME Britons will be resistant to going into isolation when contacted by Covid-19 tracers because lockdown has had such a gruelling impact on the public, a Public Health England chief has recognised.

Prof Isabel Oliver, who helped design the Government programme to trace people at risk of infection, told The Sunday Telegraph that the “vast majority” of those already contacted were proving willing to help.

However, she said the public were also already asking questions of call operators, and she signalled it would be too optimistic to expect 90 per cent of those contacted to help.

“This has been a very prolonged outbreak,” said the interim director of the National Infection Service, explaining why PHE was factoring in an expectatio­n that a minority would be uncooperat­ive or uncontacta­ble.

“Invariably we find that everyone is very willing to help, but these are exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, with an outbreak that has been so prolonged and had such an extensive impact on the people’s lives, so it is understand­ing that some people will be resistant. But having said that we are finding that lots of people are supportive and we are very grateful for that because for the programme to be successful in controllin­g the virus we need that support from the nation as a whole.”

The test and trace programme got under way in England on Thursday, and Prof Oliver and her team were immediatel­y forced to iron out IT problems which led to some of the tracers being unable to log in to the Government system. However, she insisted “the first 24 hours have gone well”. “There have been a few issues that we have identified which we are working on, but no major problems,” she added. “Our web tool has worked very well.”

The delays in getting tracers logged in was because they were running a “very secure system”.

The operation may not be fully operationa­l at a local level for another month, other figures involved in the launch have suggested.

A smartphone app being developed by NHSx to assist the programme is still believed to be weeks away from launch following trials on the Isle of Wight. Several directors of public health also told Telegraph that links between the central operation and local councils were still being rushed through on Friday.

In a video to staff, meanwhile, Rupert Soames, chief executive of Serco, which helped recruit 10,000 of the new 25,000 contact tracers, said the prospect that “all the strands of this would come together at precisely the right time belongs only to the fantasies of those people who have never organised anything more than a tea party”.

The Government has denied claims the programme had been brought forward from next week to distract from the row over alleged lockdown breaches by Dominic Cummings.

A host of contact tracers have complained that the technology has not been working in time. One from London, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: “I got an email at about 10.30pm on Wednesday letting me know that the CTAS site was going live at 8am on Thursday. I tried to log on just after 8am and had issues with the link emailed to me just showing an error page. I couldn’t get through on the phone and the web chat took about an hour to reply and provided a generic response.”

It came as Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, last night warned Britain faced a “critical week” as lockdown measures are eased. He said the lack of a “fully functionin­g” tracing programme made the Government’s decision “more risky”.

‘For the programme to be successful in controllin­g the virus we need that support from the nation as a whole’

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