"Untitled" by Jordan Reamer

The COVID-19 emergency positively feels extraordinary, and in many ways it is. Never has the world confronted a wellbeing emergency that has moved so rapidly across mainlands, overpowering complex human services frameworks, and requiring whole economies to be postponed. Be that as it may, this isn't the primary pandemic the globe has confronted, and it likely won't be the last. Together, humankind has remained on the incline of numerous vulnerabilities brought about by various unwavering infections. Be that as it may, regardless of what the test—the Spanish influenza in 1918, this season's cold virus pandemic in 1957, the HIV/AIDS emergency, West Nile, SARS, pig influenza, Ebola—there has been a light at the opposite side and exercises to be scholarly. These different pandemics all offer a similar conversation starter: What has the past instructed us that we can apply to future emergencies, and I believe the answer is simple: we need to follow the rules and help in whatever way we can to get through it together.