The Covid-19 Pandemic

With the acute phase of the Covid-19 pandemic fading even as the coronavirus persists and evolves, a new normal is taking shape around the world.

Highlights

  1. When the Pandemic Hit Home

    New York Times readers share the moment they realized Covid would change the world.

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    CreditClockwise from top left: Farah Alvin, Asia Edwards, Johnna Wallace and Tim Prendergast
  1. Four Years On, the Mysteries of Covid Are Unraveling

    Are superdodgers real? Is Covid seasonal? And what’s behind its strangest symptoms? Here’s what we’ve learned.

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  2. Long Covid May Lead to Measurable Cognitive Decline, Study Finds

    People with long Covid symptoms scored slightly lower on a cognitive test than people who had recovered. But long Covid patients who eventually got better scored as well as those whose symptoms did not last long.

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    A long Covid patient with cognitive challenges prepared for a neurofeedback therapy session in Massachusetts in June.
    CreditBrian Snyder/Reuters
  3. Older Americans Should Get Another Covid Shot This Spring, C.D.C. Says

    The agency recommended another round of vaccinations for Americans ages 65 and older.

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    Receiving a Covid booster shot in San Jose, Calif., in 2022.
    CreditJim Wilson/The New York Times
  4. Your 2024 Guide to Covid Symptoms and Treatment

    Rest, fluids and medications are your friends.

     By

    CreditGetty Images

Vaccine

More in Vaccine ›
  1. CreditKenny Holston for The New York Times
  2. CreditAlisha Jucevic for The New York Times
  3. Riders, one wearing a mask, waited for a train at the Union Square station in New York City, as the federal public health emergency expired on Thursday.
    CreditEmon Hassan for The New York Times
  4. In the early days of the pandemic, when there were no effective treatments for Covid and a new vaccine seemed a distant fantasy, health care workers were enrolled in a trial and inoculated with an old TB vaccine.
    CreditChaideer Mahyuddin/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  5. The C.D.C. said only about 43 percent of adults 65 and older had received their first booster shot.
    CreditKenny Holston for The New York Times

Maps and Trackers

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Travel

  1. CreditJosie Norton
  2. Airlines lower their fares when they are trying to get more people to book tickets as demand is slowing or they are facing stiffer competition.
    CreditStefani Reynolds for The New York Times
  3. CreditJenny Kane/Associated Press
  4. Early in the pandemic, cruise lines suspended operations, and shares in publicly traded cruise companies plummeted.
    CreditAngel Valentin for The New York Times
  5. A U.S. border crossing with Canada in July 2020, when international travel to the United States was severely restricted.
    CreditRuth Fremson/The New York Times
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