Coronavirus arrived in Europe weeks earlier than expected, doctors say



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The coronavirus appears to have infected people in France weeks before the disease was detected in Europe and possibly before the first cases of pneumonia of unknown origin were announced in China in December, according to scientists and doctors who analyzed samples of the virus.

Reanalyzing samples from patients with flu-like symptoms at a hospital north of Paris, one was found to test positive for coronavirus late last year, a finding described in an article for the International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents published this week.

“We had a positive case of Covid-19 on December 27 that was hospitalized with us in Jean-Verdier [hospital]”Yves Cohen, head of intensive care at two hospitals in Seine-Saint-Denis, north of Paris, told BFMTV in France. He was one of the contributors to the newspaper.

“It is not surprising when you consider that the World Health Organization has announced that it would circulate in China at least since December 8. Given the amount of travel, it is normal for the virus to appear rapidly in France.”

France reported the first Covid-19 death in Western Europe on February 15, when a Chinese tourist from Hubei died in a Paris hospital after arriving in the country on January 25.

Anders Tegnell, right, Sweden's chief epidemiologist, said the coronavirus may have been circulating in the country since November.

Anders Tegnell, right, Sweden’s chief epidemiologist, said the coronavirus may have been circulating in the country since November © Jessica Gow / TT News Agency / Reuters

Meanwhile, Sweden had its first case of coronavirus in November, according to the country’s leading epidemiologist. Travelers from the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the disease is believed to have originated, probably visited the country in November or December, Anders Tegnell told local media. “It doesn’t sound entirely strange,” he said.

Sweden’s first official case, a 20-year-old woman returning from a trip to Wuhan, came in January.