Football linked to 2,000 Scottish Covid cases
Published 14
hours
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-57667163
Nearly
2,000 Covid cases in Scotland have been linked to people watching Euro 2020
football matches.
Public
Health Scotland said two thirds of the 1,991 cases were people who travelled to
London for Scotland's game with England on 18 June.
This
included 397 fans who were inside Wembley for the match.
A
relatively small number of cases reported attending the Fanzone in Glasgow, or
Scotland's two home matches at Hampden.
Scotland
was only allocated 2,600 tickets for the match at Wembley because of Covid
restrictions.
But tens of
thousands of fans are believed to have travelled to London despite warnings not
to do so unless they had a ticket.
Many
gathered together in large groups in central London ahead of the game, with
those in Leicester Square being moved on by police shortly after half-time.
The
country's national clinical director, Prof Jason Leitch said he was
disappointed that 2,000 of the 32,000 cases recorded in Scotland since 11 July
had been linked to Euro 2020 events.
But he said
it was impossible to know whether people had contracted the virus while
watching a match or somewhere else, or how many people they may have
subsequently infected.
Prof Leitch
added: "Some of them may have taken it to London with them, some of them
may have got it when they came home.
"But
the increasing number of males, the increasing number of young people and the
increasing numbers with tagged Euro events, particularly indoor Euro events,
and buses and travel would suggest that there is certainly a connection between
some of that travel and the Euros".
He stressed
that it was important "not to let everyone else off the hook" because
"this is not a Euros virus".
He added:
"It is of course an important part of the last few weeks, but you can
catch the virus even if you weren't at the Euros and were not watching the
football."
Public
Health Scotland said it had tagged positive Covid cases if they attended either
a Euro 2020 organised event, such as a match at Hampden or Wembley Stadium or
the Fanzone at Glasgow Green.
People who
tested positive after attending an informal gathering, such as a pub or a house
party to watch a match, were also tagged.
The report
said that 1,294 of the 1,991 total cases had reported travelling to London,
including 397 who were actually at the match.
Only 55 of
those who tested positive reported being at the Fanzone, while 38 had been at
Scotland's match with Croatia at Hampden, and 37 at the team's opening fixture
against the Czech Republic.
About 90%
of the cases were male, with three quarters of the total - 1,470 cases - being
aged between 20 and 39.
Analysis box by Nick Triggle, health correspondent
There has
been a lot of talk about the mixing prompted by watching football being a cause
of spread of the virus in Scotland.
It is an
easy target given the images of people together in stadiums and fanzone sites.
But the problem
with this data is it does not provide the answer to that.
It is
contact tracing data used to establish who should be asked to isolate because
they may be a close contact of an infected person.
It does not
tell you where the individual caught the virus - just where they had been when
they were infectious.
So this
tells us that 6% of positive cases during this period attended a match,
Fanzone, someone's home or the pub to watch a game of football.
The fact
that people were out enjoying Scotland's first tournament for 23 years is no
surprise.
It's quite
likely that led to some transmission - although remember it is indoor settings
such as having a drink in the pub or sharing public transport on the way to the
game that is more risky than watching a match outdoors - but it's hardly an
explanation for Scotland's big rise in cases.
Scotland
fan Michael MacLean told BBC Radio Scotland's Drivetime programme that he
tested positive for Covid following his trip to London for the match against
England.
The
21-year-old travelled from Inverness on the train, visiting pubs and
celebrating with other supporters in Leicester Square during his three-night
stay in the city.
A few days
after returning to Scotland, he showed symptoms of coronavirus.
He said:
"Leicester Square, I would say, was the spreader.
"It
was an amazing experience, but I am quite gutted I got Covid because that has
affected me, affected my work, it has affected my friends."
cases 30
june
On
Wednesday Scotland recorded 3,887 new cases, which was 9.8% of all tests
carried out.
In the past
seven days 20,511 positive results have been returned.
Hospital
admissions have risen and deaths related to covid are also up, but they are
nowhere near the numbers seen during the first two waves of the pandemic.
Health
Secretary Humza Yousaf told BBC Scotland earlier this week that the data
clearly showed the number of people testing positive was "skewed
disproportionately towards young males".
And he said
several public health experts had partly put the increase down to the large
number of indoor gatherings to watch Euro 2020 matches.
First
Minister Nicola Sturgeon had previously denied claims that the Scottish
government took a lenient approach to football fans while Scotland was playing
in the tournament.
She told a
briefing on Tuesday: "We haven't taken a softly, softly approach.
"We
were very explicit in saying to fans who didn't have a ticket for Wembley not
to travel.
"We
can't physically stop every person travelling and significant numbers of people
did travel."
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