Researchers in Norway say COVID-19 was likely far more widespread in Europe, and around the world, before a first official diagnosis was made. Scientists at Akershus University Hospital near Oslo identified a positive coronavirus result in a blood sample taken from a pregnant woman on 12th December 2019 and say she was probably infected at the end of November or the beginning of December. Dubai Dunes in one Minute Copy video url Play / Pause Mute / Unmute Report a problem Language Mox Player “Our findings change the history of the corona epidemic both in Norway and in the world,” said Anne Eskild, professor and chief physician at Akershus. “We actually found four out of 1,500 tests on pregnant women that were positive before the first case in France was diagnosed,” she told Euronews. A cluster of pneumonia-like cases was identified in Wuhan, China, during December 2019, and on 12 January 2020 Chinese authorities shared the gene sequence of the new rapidly-spreading novel coronavirus. According to Eurosurveillance, Europe"s journal on infectious disease surveillance, epidemiology, prevention and control, the first three European cases were confirmed in France on 24 January 2020 after showing symptoms just a few days earlier. In May 2020 it was reported another French patient, treated for pneumonia in hospital on 27 December 2019, tested positive for COVID-19 after a swab taken at the time was analysed. Professor Eskild says her research shows the virus was around long before those French cases. “The catchment area of our hospital includes women who come from all over the world. I think that some of the women who were positive were born or had been in, or had relatives or visitors from places all over the world,” she explains. “The conclusion to this is that since the women in our catchment area are from all over the world, the virus may have been all over the world before the Chinese announced the epidemic.” As part of pregnancy care in Norway, blood samples are taken from all pregnant women to check for sexually transmitted infections. Samples are stored anonymously, for the purpose of monitoring potential infectious diseases and so were available to researchers looking into the origins of the spread of COVID-19 in the Nordic nation. “There are probably few other countries that have access to stored blood samples at the population level, and therefore there are few or no other retrospective studies,” Eskild explains. The teams’ findings have been published in the Cambridge University Press epidemiology and infection journal. — Euronews
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