Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TIMES24H
    • Hot!
      1. Vietnam
      2. Asia
      3. Video
      Featured
      Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

      Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

      By Mike HarrisonNovember 13, 20250
      Recent
      Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

      Hai Sau Sau (266) Partners with Samsung to Drive “One Samsung” Strategy in Vietnam

      November 13, 2025
      TechTimes Editors’ Choice 2024: 9Fit eBiz Mag Stand NFC Wallet – The Most Unique Mobile Accessory

      TechTimes Editors’ Choice 2024: 9Fit eBiz Mag Stand NFC Wallet – The Most Unique Mobile Accessory

      January 8, 2025

      BCP Vietnam and Vitalify Asia Launch the First A.I-Powered Business Matching Platform

      December 20, 2024
    • World
      • PR Newswire
      • Media Outreach
      • GLOBENEWSWIRE
    • Business
      Taiwan: The Global Powerhouse Shaping the Future of AI

      Taiwan: The Global Powerhouse Shaping the Future of AI

      August 29, 2025
      MEGA US EXPO 2025: A Hub for Innovation and Business Collaboration Between Vietnam and Korea

      MEGA US EXPO 2025: A Hub for Innovation and Business Collaboration Between Vietnam and Korea

      July 31, 2025
      Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

      Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

      May 19, 2025

      BCP Vietnam and Vitalify Asia Launch the First A.I-Powered Business Matching Platform

      December 20, 2024

      POPS Reaches Huge Milestone with 10,000 Enrolled Students

      December 16, 2021
    • Life
      1. Lifestyle
      2. Recipes
      3. Fashion
      4. View All
      2026 Hualien Summer Carnival  Taiwan's Premier Summer Music Festival

      2026 Hualien Summer Carnival  Taiwan’s Premier Summer Music Festival

      July 3, 2026
      VEC continues to expand its strategic partner ecosystem, completing an integrated value chain for international exhibitions and events in Vietnam

      VEC continues to expand its strategic partner ecosystem, completing an integrated value chain for international exhibitions and events in Vietnam

      July 3, 2026
      Bora Pharmaceuticals Completes Acquisition of MacroGenics’ Rockville Manufacturing Operations

      Bora Pharmaceuticals Completes Acquisition of MacroGenics’ Rockville Manufacturing Operations

      July 2, 2026
      Forest City SFZ Highlights Early JS-SEZ Traction as Investment Pipeline Expands

      Forest City SFZ Highlights Early JS-SEZ Traction as Investment Pipeline Expands

      July 2, 2026

      Cooking tips for a smaller Thanksgiving celebration

      November 18, 2020

      Hanoi: A capital, and a kingdom of egg coffee shops

      November 16, 2020

      4 must-try recipes when you travel to Vietnam

      November 7, 2020

      Cutting-Edge Technology for Top Dentists

      December 24, 2021

      H&M faces boycott in Vietnam over “problematic map”

      April 7, 2021
      Pierre Cardin

      Ground-breaking French designer Pierre Cardin dies aged 98

      December 30, 2020
      JESSICA SIMPSON

      #HealthGoals: Jessica Simpson shows off 100 lbs weight loss in Christmas pajamas

      December 27, 2020

      Plane captain dies during Miami-Chile flight

      August 17, 2023

      French paintings of Vietnamese life a century ago exhibited in HCMC

      August 17, 2023

      Judge says accused TV contest not rigged

      August 17, 2023

      I don’t know how to tell my Christian parents-in-law I want a divorce

      August 17, 2023
    • Sport
    • Tech
      1. Gadgets
      2. View All
      9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

      9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

      December 12, 2024

      “Stupid windman” PC assembly experience based on Newegg ChatGPT

      March 29, 2023

      The value of the industrial cloud as an example of “the power of ecosystem, the power of expertise”

      March 29, 2023

      Machbase Releases Open Source Structured Time Series Database “Macbase Neo”

      March 28, 2023
      Taiwan Digital Day 2025

      Taiwan Digital Day 2025: Driving Vietnam-Taiwan Tech Collaboration in Ho Chi Minh City

      July 30, 2025
      Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

      Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

      May 19, 2025
      9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

      9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

      December 12, 2024

      “Stupid windman” PC assembly experience based on Newegg ChatGPT

      March 29, 2023
    Media Outreach Newswire
    TIMES24H
    Home»Gadgets»Memorials to honor COVID-19 dead begin to take shape
    Gadgets

    Memorials to honor COVID-19 dead begin to take shape

    Mike HarrisonBy Mike HarrisonJune 5, 2021No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    How can we possibly memorialize the brutal toll of COVID-19? It’s something I’ve been thinking about this week. The US observed Memorial Day on May 31, honoring people who died in military service. Artists, politicians, and activists are now starting to think about how to memorialize the more than 3.7 million people around the world who have died of COVID-19.

    Temporary memorials have already sprung up over the past 18 months, with flags, painted hearts, and pictures honoring the dead. But plans for new, more permanent memorials are starting to take shape. Some are massive structures, others are quiet gardens, and still others will be incorporated into spaces already dedicated to memorializing people who have died. In the UK, plans are being discussed for a memorial in London at St. Paul’s Cathedral. Last August, a team in Uruguay announced plans to build a large-scale memorial to the pandemic in Montevideo.

    A concave concrete bowl with a hole in the middle is built out over the coast.

    An artist’s impression of what the memorial in Montevideo might look like.
    GomezPlatero

    Whatever form those memorials end up taking, they’ll occupy a unique place in the memorial landscape. Compared to other tributes, disease memorials are relatively rare. There are almost no memorials to the millions who died during the 1918 flu pandemic, and the few that do exist were only installed recently.

    Unlike diseases, wars, attacks, and disasters are usually finite, tied to a particular place, or a defined time. Memorials to those kinds of events can be set up at specific places. Diseases, on the other hand, can be more pervasive, spreading throughout whole regions or populations. There’s no equivalent to Ground Zero for COVID-19, just like there wasn’t for the flu that ravaged the world in 1918.

    Many diseases are also stigmatized, making them harder for people to talk about. In the past few decades, public memorials have helped break through that stigma. Forty years ago today, the first reports of a different epidemic — HIV/AIDS — were published by the CDC. The disease tore through the gay community, and homophobia and fear left patients and their loved ones ostracized. The AIDS quilt, first displayed in 1987, showed the world the devastation of the epidemic, and helped pressure officials to do something about the disease, instead of ignoring the growing death toll.

    COVID-19 memorials are being built in a different environment than the ones built by AIDS activists in the 1980s. Research into COVID-19 is well-funded, and the societal pressures between the two are nothing alike. What they do have in common is a need for a space to mourn.

    establishing memorials can be a part of helping societies heal

    Other deadly outbreaks have shown that establishing memorials can be a part of helping societies heal after devastating and disruptive loss. As a part of efforts to combat Ebola, experts recommended that memorials be established in affected regions, to give communities a safe space to mourn their dead. Cemeteries and memorials for people who died of Ebola were established in Liberia and other countries. Similar plans could help comfort people grieving loved ones lost to COVID-19, who may have had to forgo funeral rituals during the pandemic.

    Some COVID-19 memorials are already taking shape, from gardens and parks to steel statues. Others may take longer to come together. Advisory committees are being set up to plan for memorials across the US, from California to New York. Ideas for a COVID-19 memorial in New York City at the city’s public burial grounds are still in their infancy (The city’s sanitation department — hard-hit by the pandemic — recently unveiled its own memorial).

    All these monuments, made of steel and stone, and living wood will be designed to honor people who are gone, or who contributed to the efforts to stop the pandemic. There will be plaques and parks, statues and stained glass, all trying to comprehend something that is incomprehensible. Any effort will be complicated by the sheer immensity of the task at hand. The number of dead that need to be memorialized continues to grow, and may never be known fully. Anything we come up with will only be an echo of the vast loss.

    “Even if we could come up with a complete census of COVID’s victims,” author and journalist Justin Davidson wrote in Curbed earlier this year, “inscribing all their names would require a wall the size of Hoover Dam”

    Research

    COVID-19 hospitalization rates in adolescents went up during March and April
    While teenagers have a lower risk of getting severe COVID-19, they can still get very sick. Hospitalizations among kids aged 12-17 went up earlier this year, and the CDC is urging people in this age group to get the vaccine. (Nicole Wetsman/The Verge)

    Faster than a PCR test: dogs detect Covid in under a second
    It’s a tiny, not-yet peer-reviewed study, but a group in the UK has been training dogs to sniff out COVID. They are remarkably accurate, but scaling up the program might be challenging. (Linda Geddes/The Guardian)

    COVID-19 variants get new names based on Greek alphabet
    Variants finally have names that are way better than the alpha-numeric soup that researchers were using before. Now, they’ll get named after the Greek alphabet, which will also cut down on the use of location-specific names that can play into harmful stigmas. (As a weird side note, this decision comes soon after authorities decided to ditch the Greek alphabet for naming hurricanes.) (Jon Porter/The Verge)

    Development

    The pandemic showed that Big Tech isn’t a public health savior
    Big tech was hailed as a potential savior early in the pandemic. But things didn’t quite play out as the optimists thought. (Nicole Wetsman/The Verge)

    Boxed in: How a single Pfizer decision complicated the Covid vaccine rollout while boosting profits
    This is a genuinely fascinating logistics story. Pfizer made the choice to ship its vaccines in huge boxes. That might seem like a small detail, but it affected where the vaccines were sent in the early days of the US vaccination campaign. (Olivia Goldhill and Rachel Cohrs/STAT)

    Moderna applies for full FDA approval of its Covid vaccine
    Moderna became the second company to apply for full FDA approval, after Pfizer. (Berkeley Lovelace Jr./CNBC)

    Perspectives

    “I really never understood well enough how patients feel,” he said. “Even though I’m convincing patients to take a feeding tube, and encouraging them, saying, ‘Even though it looks like hell now, it will get better and you’ll get through it,’ I really never understood what that hell means.”

    — Tomaki Kato, a transplant surgeon who was treated for severe COVID-19 tells The New York Times.

    More than numbers

    To the people who have received the 2.06 billion vaccine doses distributed so far — thank you.

    To the more than 172,648,986 people worldwide who have tested positive, may your road to recovery be smooth.

    To the families and friends of the 3,714,070 people who have died worldwide — 597,003 of those in the US — your loved ones are not forgotten.

    Stay safe, everyone.

    TheVerge

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Taiwan Digital Day 2025

    Taiwan Digital Day 2025: Driving Vietnam-Taiwan Tech Collaboration in Ho Chi Minh City

    July 30, 2025
    Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

    Vietnamese Enterprises Engage with Global AI Innovations at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2025

    May 19, 2025
    9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

    9Fit and DTR Launch Vietnam’s First Smart Ring: A Leap Towards the Future of Wearable Technology

    December 12, 2024
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest News

    Hong Kong Unveils Large-Scale Toy Story 5-Themed Carnival "FOREVER TOYS @ Harbour City"

    July 3, 2026
    2026 Hualien Summer Carnival  Taiwan's Premier Summer Music Festival

    2026 Hualien Summer Carnival  Taiwan’s Premier Summer Music Festival

    July 3, 2026
    VEC continues to expand its strategic partner ecosystem, completing an integrated value chain for international exhibitions and events in Vietnam

    VEC continues to expand its strategic partner ecosystem, completing an integrated value chain for international exhibitions and events in Vietnam

    July 3, 2026

    From Ancient Capital to New Digital Silk Road Hub: The 7th Western Digital Economy Expo Sees Xi'an's Industrial Integration Unleash Strong Momentum

    July 3, 2026
    DMCA.com Protection Status
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest

    © 2026 TIMES24H. All rights reserved

    TIMES24H is a global news platform delivering timely, reliable, and insightful coverage across technology, business, lifestyle, and current affairs. Our mission is to provide readers with clear perspectives and trusted information to navigate a fast-changing world.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.