The Mail on Sunday

When was the exact moment we got infected with Covid?

They followed the rules – but still got the virus. Now, like thousands across Britain, they’re asking...

- By Nilufer Atik

IT STARTED with a text message. ‘Please pick-up. Very important’. It was a Tuesday afternoon in l ate October, and I’d been working with my phone on silent – I hadn’t noticed the four missed calls from my ex-partner, Matt. My stomach lurched. Matt had been looking after our four-year-old son, Milo for the past

few days. Had he been in an accident? I called him. ‘I’ve just tested positive for coronaviru­s,’ he blurted. ‘I have to self-isolate, so my dad is going to drop Milo back off at your house in the next hour.’

It was the last thing I was expecting him to say – and the start of a six-week ordeal in which my son and I first tested negative, then days later positive.

Worse, I ended up in hospital and, as I tried to mentally retrace my steps during that time, have been left wondering at what exact moment did I actually catch Covid?

It’s a question I reckon thousands of people will be asking themselves right now – as cases once again surge in parts of the UK, with some talking ominously of a third wave.

The thing is, many people are working from home, with indoor activities limited to socially distanced shopping or visiting one or two relatives. Everyone I know is following the rules, so the high transmissi­on rates appear somewhat of a mystery.

In the absence of any solid advice on exactly where people are contractin­g the virus the most – is it pubs, gym, shops or work? – I hope my story, and those of others I have since spoken to, will offer some clue as to what is and isn’t a risk.

The first thing I did after that fateful call with Matt was check the Government guidance: as I hadn’t actually seen my ex, and hadn’t been contacted by Test and Trace, I didn’t need to quarantine. Despite this, when Milo arrived back home I immediatel­y went with him to my local drive-through test centre, just to be sure. The result came early the next morning: negative, for us both.

I felt reassured, and we went about life as normal. But two days later came a slight tickle in my throat, and a runny nose – but importantl­y, no cough, or temperatur­e. Then, within days, exhaustion struck, and a sinking suspicious set in: perhaps I wasn’t out of the woods, after all.

WITHIN 24 hours my chest felt like it was stuck in a vice and I couldn’t swallow or talk. I contacted NHS 111 and duly went online to order home test kits. As I’d feared, the result was positive for both me and Milo. Had the first test been wrong?

The most logical explanatio­n would, after all, be that I’d caught it via my ex, Matt, 39, a teacher at a busy secondary school, who passed it to Milo – then he to me. Matt believes he had picked it up from a colleague or student.

He had no symptoms at first, apart from feeling more tired than usual, but had a test at a walk-in centre which came back positive. Within 24 hours of his isolation, he’d developed a chesty cough and headache – but no fever. But then I thought of Milo, who could have got it from the other kids at nursery, and passed it to his father.

Or if the first test was correct, Milo or I may have unwittingl­y picked up the virus in the handful of places we visited during that week – I’d been to the gym and the supermarke­t. There was a trip to the park, and the cinema, which in hindsight, I suddenly felt foolish having gone to.

After our positive tests, NHS Test a nd Trace asked me to l i st every person Milo and I had been in contact with in recent days.

The answer was no one I knew. But I’d walked among strangers in the supermarke­t. And in the cinema, although there was no one around us, I didn’t know who’d been in our seats before me.

As the days went on, Milo, thankfully, did not develop any symptoms. I, on the other hand, was less fortunate. I didn’t have much of a cough, and my fever lasted for only two of the 20 days I was unwell. Instead, I suffered excruciati­ng headaches, dizziness, a complete lack of appetite and nausea so extreme that I couldn’t even keep water down. I had diarrhoea, stomach cramps, back ache and chest pain which even prescripti­on painkiller­s didn’t manage to quash.

After ten days stuck to the sofa, I started coughing up blood.

In a panic, and with Milo safe at Matt’s house (he had since recovered), I called an ambulance and was rushed to the local hospital. I was diagnosed with secondary pneumonia and attached to a fluid drip to treat dehydratio­n, and given antibiotic­s to treat the infection on my lungs. I returned home the following day to parcels on my doorstep of soup, orange juice and noodles l eft by my wonderful neighbours. And, slowly, I began to feel better.

Other parents I’ve spoken to are similarly astonished by their mysterious infection.

Mel Dawson, a 47-year-old beautician from Staffordsh­ire, was left equally baffled when her entire family tested positive last month, despite socialisin­g with few people outside the house and living in a low-risk area.

Thankfully, neither Mel, her husband James or their two children, Amy, nine and Sarah, 11, suffered symptoms. Instead, the family were prompted to visit a local drive-in testing centre when one of Amy’s classmates tested positive.

Mel is convinced the infection spread via other children. ‘It was either school, or the neighbours’ children,’ she says. ‘Our kids play outside together all the time. And the parents told us last month that their children had it.’

But, from the start of the pandemic, officials have assured us that children are low risk, unlikely to both catch the virus or infect others. Ministers sanctioned mass return to school in September, citing that there was ‘little evidence’ that the virus is transmitte­d in educationa­l settings. So what’s the truth? Experts say it’s no coincidenc­e that the biggest upsurge in coronaviru­s cases in the capital is in ten to 19- year- olds. According t o Dr Julian Tang, consultant virologist at Leicester Royal Infirmary, official statements about low transmissi­on in children were incorrect.

‘It’s true that primary school children don’t often get symptoms, so won’t get especially ill,’ he says. ‘And as they don’t get symptoms, they’re not super- spreaders of Covid, giving it to huge numbers of people, in the same way they do the flu, which does make kids ill.

‘But they can certainly still get infected with Covid and pass the virus on to others they come into close contact with.’

The worst culprits for spreading the virus are young teenagers.

‘The virus behaves the same way it does in adults,’ says Dr Tang, ‘but secondary school children are less likely to follow the rules than adults, meaning the risk of infections is even greater.’

Another indoor setting considered rife for spreading infection is hospitalit­y venues such as restaurant­s and bars. Or, indeed, the cinema, which both Matt and I had visited leading up to our infections. While I’d gone to see a film with Milo, and sat in a near-empty screening, rows away from another person, Matt had gone with a friend, which, at the time, was permitted.

His friend, incidental­ly, tested positive a day after Matt did. But he assures me they’d sat with an

empty seat between them and the rest of the cinema was empty.

Restaurant­s, say experts, are worse, given the large number of people in a smaller space.

This week, officials in the South Korean city of Jeonju traced the infection of several unconnecte­d people back to a restaurant they all ate in at the same time, despite the fact they were sitting nowhere near each other.

And in October, one of a few British studies looking at the ideal settings for transmissi­on, noted a direct link between the Eat Out To Help Out scheme and a sudden rise in infection rates.

‘ Really crowded bars, restaurant­s and pubs are a likely point of infection,’ says Dr Paul Hunter, Professor of medicine at the University of East Anglia. ‘There’s multiple points in which transmissi­on can occur – at the table, or as you’re waiting for your table, brushing past other diners.’

Catherine Cuthbert, 36, from Tunbridge Wells, tested positive for Covid-19 in September, along with her husband and, shockingly, her ten-month-old baby Charlotte, despite going ‘hardly anywhere’.

The only place the virus could have set in, she thinks, was a restaurant, where she went for lunch with a friend a week before her cough and muscle aches started.

While Catherine’s symptoms were mild, baby Charlotte developed a soaring temperatur­e of more than 39 degrees, and was rushed to A&E, where the Covid tests yielded a dreaded result. Catherine says: ‘I was baffled. My husband works from home so had only been out of the house to do the supermarke­t shop, and was vigilant about handwashin­g and sanitising our food shopping.

‘I’d been out with Charlotte to just three places: a walk in the park with a friend, on the bus into town and to a local restaurant for lunch. And, while I will never know for certain, I think I caught Covid from the restaurant.

‘Staff weren’t wearing masks in the restaurant as it wasn’t mandatory at the time.’

Days later, reports in local newspapers surfaced of several cases contracted at the same restaurant. But what about the supermarke­t – visited by both Catherine’s husband, and me, in the week before this nightmare started?

Data based on 120,000 people who t ested positive between November 9 and 15 shows the most commonly visited place in the days leading up to infection was a supermarke­t.

Dr Tang, who believes he caught Covid in a store, says: ‘Supermarke­ts are an obvious place for infection. They’re the epicentre of a community and people from all over town will be there on a pretty regular basis.

‘Social distancing can be difficult in supermarke­ts, and many have poor ventilatio­n systems, meaning the virus can linger in the air.

‘ Me and my wife hadn’t been anywhere in months where we’d come into contact with people. And then, after a trip to the supermarke­t, I caught it.

‘Perhaps it was when I was standing at the checkout.’

Another place that’s frequently visited by many, including myself, is the gym. In the week before Covid struck, I went every day at mid-afternoon, when it’s quiet. But I didn’t go within two metres of anyone, and had a shower immediatel­y after finishing my workout.

According to Dr Tang, if the gym is large, like mine, and you go at non-peak times, transmissi­on is unlikely. ‘If the ceiling is high there is a bigger volume of air circulatin­g, making transmissi­on harder,’ he says. ‘This is also true if the machines are well spread out.’

Despite this, while catching Covid far away from someone is rare, studies have shown the virus can linger in the air after the infected person has left the area. If I’d used a machine after an infected person, I could be at risk.

‘But if you are using hand sanitiser regularly, before and after you use a machine, then the risk of catching coronaviru­s through surface transmissi­on is very minor,’ said Dr Tang. ‘Not to mention the fact your sweat has antiviral properties, so if you’re sweating a lot then this inhibits transmissi­on.’ Oddly, t he rulebreaki­ng behaviour we’re told to be the riskiest of all – socialisin­g in other people’s homes – wasn’t committed by any of the Covid patients I spoke to. While studies show that most infections are occurring in people’s households, those who live together account for most of these.

Even so, ‘ going to someone’s house is more likely to result in transmissi­on than going to a restaurant, even in areas where Covid cases are low,’ says Dr Tang. ‘It’s unlikely you’ll wear a mask or socially distance.’

And despite our commitment to following the rules, if someone else breaks them it puts us all at risk – as it increases the chances of the infection entering our social networks.

‘Minor indiscreti­ons are still continuing to drive infections,’ says Dr Tang. ‘But infections are also occurring where people briefly forget to follow the rules or just can’t. This includes things like stopping to talk to a friend in a supermarke­t for a little too long, or giving a relative a hug.

‘It’s not so much about extreme flouting of the rules and more about a general lack of awareness.’

Six weeks on – yet to fully regain my sense of smell, and suffering a lingering cough at night – I’m no less perplexed about how I caught this dreadful disease. The truth is, of course, I’ll never really know.

 ??  ?? WAS IT AT SCHOOL DROP OFF?
WAS IT AT SCHOOL DROP OFF?
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? STILL SUFFERING: Six weeks on, Nilufer Atik, with son Milo, has lingering effects of Covid-19
STILL SUFFERING: Six weeks on, Nilufer Atik, with son Milo, has lingering effects of Covid-19
 ??  ?? A&E EMERGENCY: Catherine Cuthbert with Charlotte
A&E EMERGENCY: Catherine Cuthbert with Charlotte
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom