Politics

Stella Creasy despairs as Hancock says it is wrong to pick on a small number of cogs in the wheel

Stella Creasy was unable to hide her frustration after Matt Hancock said it was “wrong to pick on a small number of cogs in the wheel” in response to her question on the latest Test and Trace debacle.

The MP for Walthamstow threw her hands up in the air after the health secretary claimed problems with data storage – caused by too many rows in an Excel document – were a “PHE legacy system”.

Visibly showing her exasperation, Hancock looked perturbed by the response, saying that she is “normally reasonable and sensible”.

But tweeting after the Commons debate, she said “who can blame her?”

Creasy joined a number of people who expressed shock and despair following revelations over the multi-billion Track and Trace project.

The issue occurred when people who tested positive were not recorded once a master Excel spreadsheet reached its maximum size – 16,384 rows, aka “XFD”.

Dr Rosena Allin-Khan tweeted: “The ‘world beating’ Serco Test and Trace system is being run on Excel instead of database software – which has caused the latest issues.

“Next they’ll tell us it’s run on Windows 95 and they manually back it up on floppy disks each night.”

IT professionals were also aghast, saying the limitations of commercial off-the-shelf products such as Excel for medical uses are “well-known”.

Related: Pope Francis laments ‘unhealthy populism’ as he outlines blueprint for post-Covid world

Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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