CrowdStrike: Company to face questions over global IT outage
GPs couldnât treat patients, people were stranded as planes couldnât get off the ground, and small businesses lost thousands in sales.
Two months on from the global IT outage on 19 July, the full impact is still only now becoming apparent.
A rogue software update by the US cybersecurity company CrowdStrike crippled up to eight and half million computers using Microsoft systems around the world.
Adam Meyers â a senior manager at CrowdStrike â will testify at the US Congress on Tuesday to explain what happened and how the company is going to prevent another disaster.
Dr David Wrigley, a GP for the past 22 years, tells the BBC that in the most serious cases, it resulted in possible delays for cancer treatments.
âIt was a very difficult period of time with very little help and support,â he said.
For many GPs, they were unable to use the EMIS system â a digital way of managing appointment bookings and patient records, as well as sending prescriptions to pharmacies.
The BMA said the CrowdStrike outage was âone of the toughest single days in recent times for GPs across Englandâ, with doctors forced to return to pen and paper.
At Dr Wrigleyâs practice, computer problems continued between Friday and Monday.
He said this created a backlog that delayed urgent tasks such as writing referral letters for patients with suspected cancers.
In some cases, this would have been delayed by âthree or four daysâ.
âYou have to prioritise those and send them as soon as possible,â he said.
âAll the referrals we do are done electronically â that couldnât happen.â
Elsewhere, the BMA said there were also major problems in Northern Ireland.
Around 75% of GPs in Northern Ireland use the EMIS system according to Dr Frances OâHagan, the chair of BMAâs Northern Ireland GP committee.
âWe couldnât do anything for most people,â she said.
âWe just had to take it on the chin and get on with it.â
She said GPs in Northern Ireland faced similar backlogs to colleagues in England, including a delay to suspected cancer referrals.
The Department of Health told the BBC it is in discussion with âexternal suppliersâ to strengthen âcontinuity arrangementsâ following the CrowdStrike outage.
It says GPs had access to âlocal copiesâ of patient data from EMIS during the outage, and all other systems worked.
Professor Kamila Hawthorne, Chair of the Royal College of GPs, told the BBC it was âcrucialâ that there should be âsafeguards in placeâ in the future.
In Surrey, 50 patients who were due to receive radiotherapy treatment on the day of the outage were forced to reschedule.
A spokesperson from NHS Royal Surrey Trust said all urgent cases were seen within 24 hours.
NHS England did not comment.
The UK government told BBC News contingency plans were quickly enacted, and said it is working with NHS England to help prevent similar incidents.
The âchaosâ at the airports
Melanie Cree and her husband Alan, from Bangor in Northern Ireland, were due to fly home from Corfu Airport on the day of the outage.
Travel operators were forced to cancel thousands of flights across the world â and Melanie and Alanâs flight was axed.
After being taken to and from the airport several times in the next few days, they managed to fly home on Monday.
Melanie said passengers were given no food, and some ran out of medication.
âIt totally ruined what should have been our dream holiday,â she said.
âWe have lovely memories, but we came back absolutely shattered. It was complete chaos.â
Their provider Tui gave them a ÂŁ400 voucher.
As Melanie and Alan struggled in Corfu, another UK family were caught up in the delays just over 500 miles (804km) away.
Laura and Malcolm Jones were struggling to return home after a holiday in Rhodes with their children.
When they were on the tarmac, the flight was cancelled. Laura told the BBC there was no information, no return of bags, and no plan.
They spent 16 hours at the airport before they were taken to a conference centre, where frustrated travellers used tablecloths as blankets.
The family paid ÂŁ560 out of their own pockets to fly back to the UK a few days later.
Tui has given them a ÂŁ600 voucher.
âI was looking forward to travelling abroad again after Covid, but I think I might just stick going to west Wales for a few years,â Laura joked.
In a statement, Tui apologised to its customers.
But the travel company was not the only one with problems. Delta Airlines in the United States faced a huge impact.
It cancelled around 7,000 flights over five days, faces an investigation from the US authorities and is involved in several legal actions.
The small business owners
Back in the UK, small business owner Dawn Watts was caught up in the outages in a different way â her website, which provides supplies to cleaning companies and hotels, was out of action.
She estimates to have lost about ÂŁ600 in sales.
âIt is extremely worrying,â she said.
âI am a sole trader â I canât have this happening again.â
Hannah Al-Khaldi, who runs a boutique fitness studio in London, faced similar issues with a non-functional website.
She estimates the outage cost her ÂŁ1,000.
âIt showed how many systems worldwide had put their eggs in one basket,â she said.
âWhen one link in the chain fails, everything else goes down.
âIs there enough choice out there for providers, or was CrowdStrike the only option?â
A spokesperson from CrowdStrike told BBC News: âAs we have said previously, we fully understand the gravity of the incident and apologise to everyone who was affected.
âWeâre committed to using the lessons learned to better serve our customers and prevent anything like this from happening again.â