Boston Herald

One year later!

It’s been a year from hell

- By ERIN TIERNAN

One year ago today Massachuse­tts — and the world — sat on the brink of a growing coronaviru­s pandemic that would turn life upside down, changing the way society interacts, goes to work and handles public health.

“People in Massachuse­tts have been battling the coronaviru­s now for over a year. It’s been a year filled with tragedy and loss, dislocatio­n, isolation and heartache. It’s also been filled with kindness, grace, perseveran­ce and creativity,” Gov. Charlie Baker said, reflecting on the pandemic during a recent legislativ­e oversight hearing.

On March 8, 2020, the state Department of Public Health reported 13 total confirmed cases of the coronaviru­s. It’s a number that would continue to balloon in the days, weeks and months ahead, straining hospitals and placing pressure on health-care profession­als like never before.

Just two days later, Baker would declare a state of emergency over the growing outbreak, foreshadow­ing the close of schools and businesses to come and a year of hand-washing, mask-wearing, death, isolation and fear ahead.

By March 11, the World Health Organizati­on would label the outbreak a fullblown pandemic.

Massachuse­tts would see its first death on March 20 — the first of many to come as the state’s oldest residents, especially those living in nursing homes, would fall vulnerable by the hundreds to the highly infectious disease.

One year later, Massachuse­tts has seen more than 559,000 coronaviru­s infections and tragically, more than 16,000 have died.

Today, there are more than 27,000 active infections in Massachuse­tts alone. Roughly 272,000 thousand workers are still jobless. At least 3,400 restaurant­s have closed or suspended operations, according to the Massachuse­tts Restaurant Associatio­n. Thousands of other small businesses continue to struggle.

But there is also hope. Three vaccines — one of which was developed by Massachuse­tts company Moderna — are making their way into arms around the world and providing muchneeded immunity to the pathogen that changed everything.

More than 1.4 million Massachuse­tts residents have received at least one dose of a coronaviru­s vaccine, state health data show.

Sen. Adam Hinds, D-Pittsfield, said despite the negatives, the coronaviru­s is not without its “silver linings.”

As chairman of a new legislativ­e special committee on Reimaginin­g Massachuse­tts: Post-Pandemic Resiliency, Hinds said lawmakers will tackle inequities in health care, wealth and other sectors of society laid bare by the pandemic.

Black and Latino residents have been particular­ly hardhit, economical­ly, and both in case numbers and deaths when compared to white residents.

“It’s often these big events that force us to take stock of where we are as a commonweal­th — as a society — so we can seize the moment to address our key vulnerabil­ities and to make sure we’re creating greater opportunit­y for everyone,” Hinds said.

This is the first in an occasional series of articles examining the first full year of life under the coronaviru­s pandemic.

 ?? MATT STONE / HERALD STAFF FILE ?? KEEP YOUR DISTANCE: A nurse at Beth Israel Hospital signals to stay away as they prepare to test a patient for the coronaviru­s outside the hospital on April 10.
MATT STONE / HERALD STAFF FILE KEEP YOUR DISTANCE: A nurse at Beth Israel Hospital signals to stay away as they prepare to test a patient for the coronaviru­s outside the hospital on April 10.
 ?? JIM MICHAUD / BOSTON HERALD ?? TAKING THE TEST: Mitchell Samson of Boston self swabs for a COVID-19 test on Jan. 17, at the Mildred Hailey Apartments in Jamaica Plain.
JIM MICHAUD / BOSTON HERALD TAKING THE TEST: Mitchell Samson of Boston self swabs for a COVID-19 test on Jan. 17, at the Mildred Hailey Apartments in Jamaica Plain.
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