The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Virus was here even earlier: Experts

Covid-19 may have been spreading a month prior to first confirmed case

- DEREK HEALEY dhealey@thecourier.co.uk

Coronaviru­s may have been spreading in Scotland for up to a month before the first confirmed case was recorded by health profession­als, the chief medical officer has said.

Dr Gregor Smith revealed experts used “next generation sequencing technology” to establish early examples of Covid-19 spreading at a community level in February.

The technique, which identifies subtle molecular difference­s between strands of the virus to create “family trees”, revealed Europe was the “main source” of at least 112 separate introducti­ons of the virus into Scotland.

Dr Smith said most strains of Covid-19 analysed from the early weeks of the outbreak are believed to have originated abroad but because “not all of them have travel history”, it is likely community transmissi­on was taking place.

“The use of this next generation sequencing technology has allowed us to identify at least 112 separate introducti­ons of Covid-19 across Scotland that ultimately led to sustained community transmissi­on,” Dr Smith said.

“It has identified viral lineages with no clear link to travel at the very early stages of the outbreak in Scotland, suggesting that there may have been earlier introducti­on to Scotland and community spread even before the first cases emerged.

“In this respect, the emergence of continenta­l Europe as the global epicentre of the epidemic appears to have been the main source of the particular lineages that have establishe­d in Scotland.”

Speaking during the Scottish Government’s daily briefing yesterday, Dr Smith said there was no evidence of “widespread” transmissi­on in February and stressed cases were likely to be “very few in number”.

The first confirmed case of Covid-19 in Scotland was announced on March 1 and involved an individual who had recently returned home to Tayside from Italy. The first recorded case of suspected transmissi­on within Scotland was on March 11.

Dr Smith said the evidence suggests an outbreak at a Nike conference in Edinburgh on February 26 was successful­ly contained because its particular “sub-lineage” of the virus had not been detected in Scotland since towards the end of March.

Earlier at the briefing, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon confirmed Scotland had recorded new deaths from coronaviru­s for the first time in three days.

A total of 2,422 patients have died after testing positive for coronaviru­s, up seven from Monday, while 15,653 people have tested positive for the virus – a rise of 14. There were 1,011 people in hospital with confirmed or suspected cases of Covid-19, a decrease of 31, and three fewer patients in intensive care.

Despite the rise in deaths, she said the figures were “further indication of a clear downward trend” .

She also confirmed initial data from the Scottish Government’s Test and Protect contact-tracing system will be published today.

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