COVID-19

Explore moments from the biggest health disaster of the 21st century

Vítimas da Covid-19 (2020-04-22) by Lalo de AlmeidaFolha de S.Paulo

Humanity at risk

In 2020, the world faced one of the most challenging periods in history, as it started what would be a long battle against a new virus: the SARS-CoV-2 (or new coronavirus), which causes COVID-19—an infectious disease that would claim millions of lives around the world.

The first outbreak of the new coronavirus was detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan in December 2019. Still just an epidemic at that time, it would go on to spread all around the world.

On February 6, 2020, despite dismissing the seriousness of the virus, President Jair Bolsonaro passed a decree to tackle COVID-19 in Brazil.

Covid-19 (2020-03-22) by Eduardo KnappFolha de S.Paulo

Empty city

On February 26, a São Paulo resident returning from a trip to Italy became Brazil's first confirmed case of COVID-19. At that time, there had been 80,000 reported cases of infection and 2,700 deaths worldwide.

In March, with the number of infections growing, governors in various states adopted stricter measures to stop the virus spreading. These included closing public and private schools, and shutting down commercial premises.

Pandemia da Covid-19 (2020-06-08) by Rivaldo GomesFolha de S.Paulo

Masks

Users of the city's public transport system wear masks for protection at the Grajaú bus terminal in São Paulo's South Zone.

The first COVID-19 death in Brazil was a 62-year-old man, who died in São Paulo on March 19, 2020. His death came just nine days after the World Health Organization recognized the global nature of the threat and officially upgraded COVID-19 to a pandemic.

On May 4, 2020, when Brazil passed the milestone of 2,800 deaths in 60 days, the governor of São Paulo, João Doria, made the use of masks obligatory throughout the state.

Covid-19 (2020-04-29) by Eduardo KnappFolha de S.Paulo

Lives or the economy?

Stores on 25 de Março Street, one of Brazil's busiest and most famous shopping areas, brought down their shutters while they waited for the state government to issue new measures for the commercial sector.

Throughout 2020, President Jair Bolsonaro and the federal government continued to call for an end to social distancing, contradicting the advice from specialists and the World Health Organization itself. The president even accused the press of spreading panic about the virus.

Charge de Jean Galvão (2021-03-28) by Jean GalvãoFolha de S.Paulo

A country in crisis

In April 2020, the federal government, backed by the Brazilian House of Representatives (Câmara dos Deputados) and Senate (Senado), arranged emergency assistance worth 600 Brazilian reais (around 120 US dollars) a month for the unemployed, self-employed, formal employees, and micro-entrepreneurs during the pandemic.

The president originally planned to set the amount at 200 Brazilian reais (around 40 US dollars), but the National Congress (Congresso Nacional) intervened and increased the benefit to three times the original offer.

Vítimas da Covid-19 (2020-04-22) by Lalo de AlmeidaFolha de S.Paulo

10,000 deaths

On May 9, three months after the country's first death from the new coronavirus, the COVID-19 death toll reached 10,000 in Brazil. The number of people sick with COVID-19 exceeded 150,000.

Covid-19: higienização (2020-03-31) by Pedro LadeiraFolha de S.Paulo

In the space of 30 days during the pandemic, President Bolsonaro dismissed two health ministers because of disagreements over the policies being adopted to contain the virus. The first, Luiz Henrique Mandetta, left his post on April 16 and Nelson Teich followed on May 15.

Folha TV: The front line

At the Emílio Ribas public hospital in São Paulo, doctors are in a race against time to delay the moment when they will have to decide who lives and who dies.

Vítimas da Covid-19 (2020-04-22) by Lalo de AlmeidaFolha de S.Paulo

50,000 deaths

In São Paulo's South Zone, family members attend William Souza Batista's funeral at the São Luiz cemetery, one of the city's largest.

On June 20, less than 100 days after the first COVID-19 infection in Brazil, the number of deaths in the country reached 50,000. This was one of the worst death rates in the world, second only to the US, which had reached the 50,000 milestone in fewer than 55 days.

Covid-19 (2020-04-02) by Marlene BergamoFolha de S.Paulo

United in the cause

On June 8, 2020, the newspapers Folha de São Paulo, UOL, O Estado de São Paulo, O Globo, and Extra set up CVI, a media consortium to publicize statistics about the pandemic.

The consortium's aims were a direct response to the federal government's decision to limit disclosure about COVID-19 figures.

Charge de Jean Galvão (2021-03-07) by Jean GalvãoFolha de S.Paulo

100,000 deaths

On August 8, 2020, two weeks after reaching a peak of an average of more than 1,000 deaths every day, Brazil recorded 100,000 deaths, with a further 3 million people infected. Once again, the country was second only to the US, where 161,000 had died.

Later that same month, the government rejected two offers from pharmaceutical company Pfizer, which was promising delivery of 70 million doses of its vaccine by December 2021. The government claimed that the 3 million doses promised to Brazil by the first quarter of 2021 would not be enough.

Covid-19: vacinação (2021-01-18) by Danilo VerpaFolha de S.Paulo

At the end of September 2020, Brazil's Butantan Institute and the Chinese pharmaceutical company Sinovac—manufacturer of the CoronaVac vaccine—signed a contract with the São Paulo government to supply 46 million doses of the vaccine by December.

At federal level, the president released 2.5 billion Brazilian reais (around 470 million US dollars at the time) to join the COVAX Facility, an international consortium set up as part of a World Health Organization initiative to facilitate global access to COVID-19 vaccines. In the meantime, the government lacked any national plan to halt the virus.

In November, Brazil's Federal Supreme Court (Supremo Tribunal Federal) asked the national government for an effective plan to contain the virus. The following month, the Ministry of Health delivered its National COVID-19 Vaccination Plan to the court.

Pandemia da Covid-19 (2021-01-17) by Eduardo AnizelliFolha de S.Paulo

The first person to be vaccinated

January 17, 2021: the first person to receive the vaccine in Brazil, nurse Monica Calazans, with São Paulo governor João Doria, at the conference center at the Clinical Hospital of the University of São Paulo Medical School in the state capital.

The 54-year-old nurse was vaccinated minutes after the emergency use of CoronaVac was approved by the Brazilian Health Regulatory Agency (Anvisa). The first people to receive the vaccines would be health workers and the elderly.

Pandemia da Covid-19 (2021-04-13) by Eduardo KnappFolha de S.Paulo

Running out of air

In mid-January 2021, the health system in the Amazonas State capital, Manaus, was in a state of collapse. An increasing number of patients with COVID-19 were being admitted, partly as a result of the New Year festivities.

The shortage of oxygen in Manaus may have cost the lives of 31 COVID-19 victims, according to a report published by the Public Ministry of Accounts (Ministério Público de Contas) at the time. Around 200 patients had to be transferred to hospitals in other states because of the shortage of oxygen cylinders.

Covid-19: vacinas (2021-01-19) by Pedro LadeiraFolha de S.Paulo

At the Manaus air base, soldiers from the Brazilian Air Force (Força Aérea Brasileira) prepare thermal boxes containing COVID-19 vaccines to be sent to Tabatinga in Amazonas State. Part of the consignment would be sent on to Indigenous villages in the region.

Pandemia da Covid-19 (2021-03-12) by Daniel MarencoFolha de S.Paulo

COVID-19: One year on

One year after its first COVID-19 case on February 26, 2020, the country would record 1,582 deaths in a single day, a new record at the time. It brought the country's totals to 251,661 deaths and 10.3 million infections.

In the city of São Paulo, where Brazil's first COVID-19 case was discovered, the hospital bed occupation rate exceeded 90% in the private healthcare sector.

Pandemia da Covid-19 (2020-03-27) by Eduardo AnizelliFolha de S.Paulo

A hospital on a soccer field

On April 1, 2021, the Campanha Municipal Hospital began receiving patients. It was set up at the Pacaembu Stadium by São Paulo's City Hall (Prefeitura), solely to care for people infected with COVID-19.

Weeks earlier, the city of São Paulo—which had the best hospital infrastructure in Brazil—saw its first patient die due to the lack of beds. That victim was 22-year-old Renan Ribeiro Cardoso. Six days later, Brazil reached the grim milestone of 300,000 deaths.

CPI (Comissão Parlamentar de Inquérito) da Covid 19 (2021-06-24) by Pedro LadeiraFolha de S.Paulo

Actions and failings

On April 27, 2021, the Parliamentary Inquiry Commission (Comissão Parlamentar de Inquérito), made up of 11 Members of Congress, launched its investigation into the Bolsonaro government's actions and failings during the COVID-19 pandemic.

One of the topics covered by the inquiry was the purchase of medicines such as chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine. These products lacked any scientifically proven effectiveness against the virus, yet the federal government spent 126.5 million Brazilian reais (around 23 million US dollars at the time) on purchasing them, and encouraged people to use them.

Covid-19: vacinação (2021-02-27) by Danilo VerpaFolha de S.Paulo

Science saving lives

On April 8, 2021, 4,249 people died from COVID-19 in Brazil. However, in early May, research led by the Federal University of Pelotas indicated a drop of more than 50% in deaths among the elderly, due to the vaccination program that had started in January.

On January 17, the inland São Paulo municipality of Serrana, with an estimated population of 45,000, was the first in Brazil to start a mass vaccination program against COVID-19. The initiative was part of a clinical study by the Butantan Institute called Project S.

Four months later, the study revealed that the number of deaths had fallen by 95%, the number of symptomatic sufferers by 80%, and the number of hospitalized patients by 86%.

Vítimas da Covid-19 (2020-06-19) by Lalo de AlmeidaFolha de S.Paulo

Half a million

On June 19, 2021, a little more than a year after COVID-19 started spreading in Brazil, the country recorded 500,868 deaths from the virus, becoming only the second country with more than half a million victims. The number of infections reached 17,881,045.

Vítimas da Covid-19 (2021-03-31) by Lalo de AlmeidaFolha de S.Paulo

Under floodlights and wearing protective clothing, undertakers carry the coffin of a COVID-19 victim at the Vila Formosa cemetery in São Paulo's East Zone. With the number of deaths from the virus growing, the City Hall (Prefeitura) decided to extend the cemetery's working hours until 10pm.

Covid-19: vacinas (2021-01-14) by Eduardo AnizelliFolha de S.Paulo

On September 15, the Butantan Institute delivered 50 million doses of the CoronaVac vaccine to the Ministry of Health's National Immunization Program. It was the last of the 100 million doses provided as agreed between the institute and the federal government.

In November, the World Health Organization identified a new SARS-CoV-2 variant, Omicron, which had been detected in South Africa. In July, the Delta variant was identified in India and this became the predominant strain in the city of São Paulo.

Pandemia da Covid-19 (2022-01-14) by Bruno SantosFolha de S.Paulo

Child immunization

On January 14, 2022, the São Paulo government started vaccinating children aged 5 to 11 against COVID-19. The first Brazilian child to be vaccinated was an 8-year-old Indigenous boy, Davi Seremramiwe Xavante.

Born in a Xavante Indigenous village in Mato Grosso State, Davi had been in São Paulo for a year, receiving treatment for a genetic disorder at the Clinical Hospital's Children's Institute (Instituto da Criança). He received his vaccination at the Clinical Hospital with Governor João Doria looking on.

Folha TV: Infections in children

At the Cândido Fontoura Hospital, the largest children's hospital in São Paulo State, doctors recorded cases of COVID-19 infections in children with no pre-existing conditions.

Pandemia da Covid-19 (2022-06-06) by Danilo VerpaFolha de S.Paulo

The fourth wave

At the end of June 2022, figures published by the media consortium CVI revealed 670,000 deaths, 32 million confirmed cases of the disease, and a moving average of 208 deaths per day in Brazil—an increase compared to the average figure of 200 deaths for the previous three months.

With a 78.3% growth in the number of recorded new cases of the virus, Brazil was about to face its fourth wave of the disease.

Credits: Story

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