Daily Mail

HOW MANY MORE CORONA FIASCOS?

After PPE and testing shambles, minister scraps his own virus tracing app... and new version may not even be ready by winter!

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

BRITAIN’S lockdown exit strategy hit yet another setback last night as ministers admitted they were scrapping their muchvaunte­d tracing app.

In a damaging U-turn, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the system the Government had spent months developing would not work on millions of phones.

Instead he said the NHS would be reverting to a technology used in other countries which ministers had previously dismissed.

However, officials have no idea whether the new smartphone app will be effective – or indeed if it will be ready in time for winter when coronaviru­s is expected to be resurgent. The setback is a fresh embarrassm­ent for the Government after a string of policy U-turns over testing, protective equipment for health workers, the return of schools and the quarantine system for travellers.

The app was supposed to have been rolled out last month as a key part of what Boris Johnson promised would be a ‘world-beating’ test-and-trace system to help Britain track cases and ease lockdown restrictio­ns. Ministers hoped the technology would work alongside

human contact tracers to identify local outbreaks of the virus and shut them down before they spread.

But reports of problems with the app soon become widespread and earlier this week junior health minister Lord Bethell admitted it was ‘not a priority’ and might not be ready before winter.

Officials confirmed the problems yesterday, and announced they would be switching from the technology run by NHSX – the Health Service’s digital arm – to a version jointly provided by Apple and Google.

This is because a major trial on the Isle of Wight had revealed that the app didn’t work properly on Apple iPhones, one of the UK’s most popular handsets with seven million sold last year.

Figures from the trial had shown the app would detect just four per cent of contacts on iPhones, compared with 75 per cent on Android devices. The AppleGoogl­e system detects 99 per cent.

Yesterday Mr Hancock said officials had stumbled across a ‘technical barrier’, admitting ‘as it stands, our app won’t work because Apple won’t change their system’. But he refused to say when the new app would be ready.

The failure of the app project – which the Department of Health had been working on since the start of April – has caused dismay in Downing Street.

Last night there was renewed speculatio­n about Mr Hancock’s position in the next reshuffle. One Government source acknowledg­ed the episode was a ‘ shambles’, adding: ‘ He has overpromis­ed and under-delivered and we have seen too much of that.’

The setback has fuelled Tory unease over its handling of the crisis and, at a private meeting with senior Tory MPs on Wednesday, Mr Johnson was told he needed to break out of his Downing Street bunker and start listening to backbenche­rs to avoid further missteps. In other developmen­ts:

A 13-day-old baby with no underlying conditions became Britain’s youngest victim as the death toll rose by 135 to 42,288;

Plans for a ‘travel corridor’ between the UK and France were in doubt as Mr Johnson and Emmanuel Macron failed to make a breakthrou­gh;

MPs urged England to follow

Northern Ireland in allowing schools to operate with social distancing of just one metre;

A day of good news on levels of infection provided growing evidence the outbreak is coming under control;

The Bank of England governor warned Britain is facing the most dramatic rise in unemployme­nt in his lifetime.

At the Downing Street press conference yesterday Mr Hancock would not say when the new app would be ready. He said: ‘We’re working on it. We’re not going to put a date on it I’m afraid because I’m absolutely determined that, whilst this technology can help, it’s got to be working effectivel­y.’

He said he would be combining ‘the best bits’ of the old app and Apple-Google’s – but officials are not completely confident this will work.

Yesterday Labour health spokesman Jonathan Ashworth said: ‘ The Government’s response has been slow and badly managed. Time and money has been wasted.’

Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, said: ‘This is yet another example of the dangers of over-promising and under-delivering.’

Several countries have already launched contact-tracing apps including France, Italy and Germany.

The app is meant to be central to the test-and-trace strategy but figures suggest this is far from perfect itself, with just 73 per cent of those who tested positive for the virus giving details of their close contacts. Comment – Page 18

nLatest coronaviru­s video news, views and expert advice at mailplus.co.uk/coronaviru­s

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Scrapped: The NHS tracing app

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