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A technical problem on the one hand, a human error on the other, and the consequence was that in the United Kingdom about 16 thousand cases of coronavirus were lost in the counts due to a computer failure, with more than 50 thousand potentially infected contacts have not been tracked. These are the results of the swabs made in the period between September 25 and October 2, which have already been entered, albeit with a delay, in the database, causing the coronavirus cases in the last bulletin to jump to 22,961, from just over 12,000 on the day. previous.
“What happened here is that some data was truncated and lost. The first thing we did now was contact all the people who have been identified as carriers of the disease, and now we are working on tracing the contacts.” declared the Secretary of State for Health, Matt hancock, who held several emergency telephone meetings with various mayors to address the situation.
As The Guardian reports, a Public Health official in England admitted it was “an IT problem involving the transfer of data from one system to another. It’s all PHE’s fault.” our part of the process, “he admitted, explaining that the problem” depended on a combination of human error and IT: a human being using IT. It is fundamentally an IT error, but there is also some human error involved in that. “
It is understood that the error would have occurred during data processing because PHE is committed to ensuring that people who test positive for the coronavirus are only counted once, even if two or more tests have been done, like some people. And in this double counting something went wrong, perhaps also thanks to the Excel sheets used. The United Kingdom is among the states in Europe most affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, and has exceeded the threshold of 500 thousand positive cases for the new coronavirus.
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First Boris johnson he warned on Sunday that the country has “a harsh winter ahead” and that the “harsh” period could last “until Christmas and beyond.” Hoping to avoid a national shutdown, the government is stepping up local action to try to control the spread of the virus, which has already killed 42,350 people (including 33 in the last 24 hours), the highest number of victims in Europe.