Mistakes at UK COVID testing lab may have led to deaths of 20 people
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[November 30, 2022]
By Andrew MacAskill
LONDON (Reuters) -England's government agency responsible for responding
to public health emergencies said mistakes at a testing laboratory led
to misreporting of tens of thousands of positive COVID-19 cases as
negative and may have resulted in the deaths of about 20 people.
Britain has one of the highest coronavirus death tolls in the world,
with more than 177,000 deaths since the pandemic started in 2020.
Many experts have said the contact tracing programme fell well short of
the "world-beating" system the government had promised.
An investigation by the UK's Health Security Agency (UKHSA) found the
Immensa laboratory in central England was found to have misreported
around 39,000 tests as negative when they should have been positive
between Sept. 2 and Oct. 12 last year.
The cause of the mistakes was the incorrect setting of the threshold
levels for reporting positive and negative results of PCR samples for
COVID-19, UKHSA said in a report after completing an investigation.
As a result, many people would have continued with their daily lives and
not self-isolated even though they had COVID.
The UKHSA said the mistakes could have led to as many as 55,000
additional infections in areas where the false negatives were reported.
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People wearing protective face masks
walk through Waterloo train station, amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, in London, Britain, January 3, 2022.
REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
Immensa Health Clinic, the private
company who run the lab, was founded in May 2020, and has been
awarded contracts worth 170 million pounds ($203.63 million) to
process results of PCR tests.
Dante Labs, the owners of Immensa, did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
"Through this investigation we have looked carefully at the
arrangements in place for overseeing contracts of private labs
providing surge testing during this time," said Richard Gleave,
UKHSA director and the lead investigator.
"There was no single action that NHS Test and Trace could have taken
differently to prevent this error arising in the private laboratory.
However, our report sets out clear recommendations to both reduce
the risk of incidents like this happening again."
($1 = 0.8349 pounds)
(Reporting by Andrew MacAskill; Editing by Alistair Smout and Arun
Koyyur)
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