The first year of the pandemic

Published: Jan. 6, 2021, 9 p.m.

Claudia Hammond talks to Guardian health editor Sarah Boseley exactly one year after she and Claudia first talked on Health Check about a mysterious respiratory disease that had appeared in Wuhan in China \u2013 with 59 cases reported at that point. What have been the highs and lows of the world\u2019s response to the coronavirus so far?

Alison van Diggelen reports from the USA on research which has found that on average the mental wellbeing of older people has held up better during the pandemic than that of younger generations, despite the mortality risk being much higher for the elderly. Researchers in California and Georgia have also looked at why. \n \nFor listeners living under strict lockdowns, psychologist Virginia Frum recommends awe walks. Walks during which you deliberately look out for things to be amazed by can boost your emotional wellbeing. You don\u2019t have to travel to spectacular scenery: awe walks can work just as well in a city as out in nature.

Boston University\u2019s global health epidemiologist Matthew Fox is Claudia\u2019s guest of the week. They discuss the United States\u2019 troubled Covid vaccine rollout, the long term health problems of conflict refugees, and how smartphones can improve a low-tech method of cervical cancer screening.

Presenter: Claudia Hammond\nProducer: Andrew Luck-Baker

(Picture: Medical staff members wearing protective clothing accompanying a patient in Wuhan, China in January 2020. Photo credit: STR/AFP/Getty Images.)