The New Zealand Herald

Virus may have been spreading in France since December

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French scientists say they may have identified a possible case of the new coronaviru­s dating back to December — about a month before the first cases were officially confirmed in Europe.

In a study published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Microbial Agents, doctors at a hospital north of Paris reviewed retrospect­ive samples of 14 patients treated for atypical pneumonia between early December and mid-January.

Among those were the records of Amirouche Hammar, a fishmonger in his 40s from Algeria who has lived in France for years and had no recent travel history.

Hammar said yesterday that he drove himself to hospital at 5am one day in late December because he felt very sick, with chest pains and breathing difficulti­es.

“They said, ‘Perhaps you have an infection, a pulmonary infection, although it’s not certain. But what you have is very serious, very serious, because you are coughing blood. It’s not normal flu,’” he said.

Hammar was admitted to the hospital with symptoms doctors say were consistent with Covid-19 patients in China and Italy.

One of his children had also become sick with an unusual pneumonia shortly before Hammar fell ill. When doctors retested Hammar’s old sample, they found it was positive for the coronaviru­s.

“Identifyin­g the first infected patient is of great epidemiolo­gical interest as it changes dramatical­ly our knowledge” regarding the spread of the coronaviru­s, wrote Dr Yves Cohen. He and colleagues suggested their results showed there could be many other unidentifi­ed coronaviru­s cases from before the disease was officially detected in Europe. — AP

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