The UK has reported 12,594 new coronavirus cases and 19 deaths after several days of confusion as 16,000 cases in England were missed by the NHS Test and Trace scheme.
It led to a large spike of nearly 23,000 cases being reported on Sunday and meant that in some clusters the disease was allowed to spread unchecked.
Public Health England (PHE) said a technical issue had meant 15,841 cases between 25 September and 2 October were left out of daily reports.
A problem with an Excel spreadsheet reaching its maximum size has been blamed.
The UK misses 16,000 Covid-19 cases because their "system" for managing data was... Excel.https://t.co/5OpLe8FGCd pic.twitter.com/QLkd9kXAvz
— Joe Brew (@joethebrew) October 5, 2020
The government said 6,500 staff had been drafted in over the weekend to track down contacts of the missed cases.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock said 51% of the cases had been contacted a second time by Monday morning, with efforts to trace their contacts going on at the same time.
Speaking in the Commons, he added: "The chief medical officer has analysed that our assessment of the disease and its impact has not substantially changed as a result of these data."
However, the error means the weekly infection rate has soared in dozens of areas of England.
Official figures show the UK has recorded a further 22,961 cases of COVID-19 after Public Health England announced it has identified 15,841 cases that were not included in previous cases between 25 September and 2 October due to a technical issue
— Sky News Breaking (@SkyNewsBreak) October 4, 2020
Manchester now has the highest rate, with a rise of 2,740 cases - the equivalent of 495.6 instances per 100,000 people.
The city's infection rate has more than doubled in seven days.
Monday's 19 new reported deaths were all in England and take the UK total to 42,369.
They record people who died within 28 days of their first positive test, though coronavirus may not be the actual cause of death in all cases.
Weekly COVID-19 cases up 61% in England, Test and Trace figures show: There has been a 61% increase in the number of people testing positive for COVID-19 In England in the latest weekly data, Test and Trace figures show.
— GLOBAL BREAKING NEWS (@globalbreaking_) October 1, 2020
England recorded the vast majority of the latest new cases, with 10,685.
Scotland had 697, Wales 596 and Northern Ireland 616.
Even with the missed cases added, the trajectory of the disease is still significantly slower than possible scenarios outlined a few weeks ago.
England's chief science officer, Sir Patrick Vallance, had said that without tougher rules average daily cases could potentially double every week.
It is also much lower than the 100,000 infections per day that many experts estimate for the peak of the pandemic in spring when there wasn't widespread community testing.
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