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Swine flu website crashes on launch day

Tags: Alert   Conservative party   DH   Flu line   Pandemic   website  

24 Jul 2009

The National Pandemic Flu Service website crashed on the day it was launched after the site recorded more than 9.3m hits per hour.

The Department of Health said demand was “unprecedented” with 2,600 hits a second and that it believed many people were visiting the site out of curiosity.

Chief medical officer Sir Liam Donaldson told the BBC: “We have quadrupled capacity but we’re not expecting people to remain curious for very long”.

The site became unavailable shortly after its launch at 3pm yesterday and was then available intermittently throughout the rest of the day.

Visitors to the site were presented with the message: "The service is currently very busy and cannot deal with your request at this time. Please try again in a little while."

The message was displayed shortly after launch and was also showing close to midnight.

The National Pandemic Flu Service was criticised by the Conservative Party who said the web and telephone advice service should have been set up earlier. The Flu Line was originally supposed to be available at World Health Organisation pandemic alert phase four or five, reached in April, but faced delays as EHI Pirmary Care revealed.

The 0800 telephone number for the service has also been criticised after The Times claimed that Vodafone users would have to pay up to 20p a minute to access the service.

However, a spokesperson for Vodafone told EHI Primary Care that Vodafone users would not be charged for calling the National Pandemic Flu Service.

She said she could not confirm as yet whether calls had been zero-rated since the launch of the service yesterday afternoon but that as from today callers would not be charged.

© 2009 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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1

What a surprise...

acapnotic@msn.com

27 Jul 09 12:07

'...The Department of Health said demand was “unprecedented” with 2,600 hits a second and that it believed many people were visiting the site out of curiosity...'

After all the Government and media hype then what did they expect. Maybe if they planned ahead and tested the application under adequate load before deployment then this wouldnt of happened. The cynic in me would suggest that this was never tested and that while we are dealing with a virus that is mild this deployment was used as a testing mechanism in preparation for a more serious outbreak.


2

Damned if you dither. . .

27 Jul 09 20:07

Media Scrum #1:- ZOMG!!! It's outrageous that the NHS didn't set up a massive call centre (One that needs to handle more calls per hour than Directline, Churchill & Natwest put together) in 5 minutes flat! Beuraucracy Gone Mad!!!!

Media Scrum #2:- Only 1 day's training!?!?!! Disgusting! They should have delayed the launch by a few weeks to train call handlers to read a script! Typical public sector sloppiness!

Media Scrum #3:- Now we've terrified the public with alarmist rants that we're all going to die, let's rejoice that we've overloaded the system, and filmed our journalists doing so. Huzzah!

IMHO, the establishment of a simultaneous web and voice based service of this magnitude in such a short timescale is a credit to all involved.

Right. I'm off to swamp the phoneline now and if I manage to get an engaged tone or a holding message, I'll sell the mp3 to Max Clifford.


3

unprecedented

29 Jul 09 08:07

Er.....how can any new hotline have anything other than an unprecedented demand?

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