Wuhan early COVID-19 patients, ordinary people without special habits – WHO

The worlds earliest identified COVID-19 patients in Wuhan, China were ordinary people who did not have special habits such as hiking in the mountains or having exotic pets at home.
The team leader of the World Health Organisation (WHO) COVID-19 origin-tracing mission said on Tuesday.
“It was in a way fascinating to realise that these people (the first identified COVID-19 patients) are not holding very exciting clues.
“When we talked to one of the first cases who had onset symptoms in early December, when you talk to one of these cases, you immediately think they must have some very special habits, hiking in the mountains, or having special wild pets at home.
“All these kinds of ideas pop up,” Peter Ben Embarek, the head of the WHO mission in Wuhan said during a news conference.
However, these first patients do not have any special history of interests, the WHO official continued.
“And then you realise they’re very much like all of us, no special particular history of interests, spending most of their days on the internet, doing the same activities, sports and jobs, office work type of jobs as many of us do.
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“Its also illustrating how complicated this work origin-tracing is,’’ the expert added.
The WHO team said during the news conference earlier that COVID-19 most likely came from intermediary animal hosts that carried the new coronavirus.


