The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

France confirms first death in Europe as Scots flee China

- By Krissy Storrar kstorrar@sundaypost.com

AChinese tourist in France has become the first person to die from the coronaviru­s outside Asia.

The 80-year-old man from Hubei province had been in quarantine in hospital in Paris since January 25. But yesterday it was confirmed he had died of a lung infection caused by the deadly virus. His daughter, who was also infected, is making a good recovery.

Five of the 11 coronaviru­s cases in France are British nationals who became infected at a ski chalet in the Alps. Yesterday French Health Minister Agnès Buzyn said the elderly holidaymak­er had been in a critical condition in the Bichat hospital in northern Paris. He had arrived in France on January 16 from the Chinese province at the centre of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

A team of experts from the World Health Organisati­on began a mission this weekend to assess the situation in China. WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said: “Particular attention will be paid to understand­ing the transmissi­on, the severity of the disease and the impact of ongoing response measures.”

Experts fear that 60% of the global population could catch coronaviru­s if it’s spread cannot be controlled.

Even if the death rate among those infected was as low as 1% it could then claim 45 million lives worldwide. A public health emergency of internatio­nal concern has been declared by WHO, which prompted the four UK Chief Medical Officers to raise the UK risk level from low to moderate.

Concerns have also been raised over whether the NHS could cope with a major escalation in the number of cases. A survey of 500 frontline health workers revealed that 96% did not believe the NHS was ready to deal with a major outbreak.

The research commission­ed by Channel 4 also found 88% of respondent­s thought there are not adequate facilities to handle large numbers of suspected coronaviru­s patients.

Health officials at NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde will now be testing people at home if they develop symptoms.

A testing kit also had to be flown to a North Sea platform after a crew member who had just returned from holiday in Thailand fell ill. The man has been placed in isolation from his colleagues on the Tern Alpha platform off Shetland.

Hundreds of American holidaymak­ers are also being evacuated from a quarantine­d cruise liner in Japan. The US government has chartered a plane to repatriate around 380 passengers from the Diamond Princess. They will have to undergo health checks before boarding the flight from Tokyo to an air force base in California.

More than 200 people from the ship have caught the virus.

 ??  ?? Travellers from China arriving at an airport in Paris
Travellers from China arriving at an airport in Paris

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