From News Nation:
“COVID-19
one year later: Revisiting a world on the precipice of a global pandemic”
Thursday marks
one year since the World Health Organization declared coronavirus a global
pandemic. On March 11, 2020, confirmed cases of COVID-19 worldwide stood at
125,000, and reported deaths stood at less than 5,000. On that day, Italy
closed shops and restaurants, locking down after 10,000 reported infections.
The NBA suspended its season, and Tom Hanks, filming a movie in Australia,
announced he was infected with the virus. On that evening, then-President
Donald Trump addressed the nation from the Oval Office, announcing restrictions
on travel from Europe that set off a trans-Atlantic scramble. Airports flooded
with unmasked crowds in the days that followed. Soon, they were empty. So many
of the photographs feature unmasked faces, and to 2021 eyes it is jarring. And that, for much of the world, was just the
beginning.
As of
Wednesday, there have been more than 117 million confirmed coronavirus cases
globally and more than 2.6 million people worldwide have died from the virus,
according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. No one has been
untouched by the virus. Not the Michigan woman who awakened one morning, her
wife dead by her side. Not the domestic worker in Mozambique, her livelihood
threatened by the virus. Not the North Carolina mother who struggled to keep
her business and her family going amid rising hate crimes against Asian
Americans. Not the sixth-grader, exiled from the classroom in the blink of an
eye. “I expected to go back after that week,” said Darelyn Maldonado, now 12.
“I didn’t think that it would take years.”
Roughly 10
million jobs were lost in the United States because of the pandemic and getting
those jobs back is proven to be a struggle. Millions of jobs lost likely won’t
come back — especially at employers that require face-to-face contact with
consumers: Hotels, restaurants, retailers, entertainment venues.
Vaccines have
provided a glimmer of hope in 2021 along with new long-awaited guidance from
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Fully vaccinated Americans can
now gather with other vaccinated people indoors without wearing a mask or
social distancing, the CDC announced Tuesday. The recommendations also say that
vaccinated people can come together in the same way with people considered at
low-risk for severe diseases, such as in the case of vaccinated grandparents
visiting healthy children and grandchildren. The guidance is designed to
address a growing demand, as more adults have been getting vaccinated and
wondering if it gives them greater freedom to visit family members, travel, or
do other things like they did before the pandemic. Even as vaccines
increasingly promise a return to something close to normal life, emerging virus
variants are a cause for concern. Public health experts tracking the trajectory
of more contagious virus variants have warned that lifting restrictions too
soon could lead to another lethal wave of infections.
The nation’s
top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said Wednesday the best
estimate when enough people are immune to end the outbreak range between 70-85%
of the population — a figure expected to be attained by late summer or early
fall. About 9.7% of the U.S. population, or 32 million people, have been fully
inoculated with COVID-19 vaccines made by Pfizer Inc/ BioNTech SE, Moderna Inc
and Johnson & Johnson, according to CDC data. CDC Director Rochelle
Walensky has warned of a potential for a fourth wave of cases in the U.S.,
saying, “We have the ability to stop that from happening if Americans continue
to follow public health protocols, including masking, washing hands and social
distancing.”
^ It’s odd to
stop and think about what life was like 1 year ago right before Covid happened.
^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.