In March 2020, the first patients were first diagnosed with COVID-19 in Johns Hopkins Medicine’s hospitals. Two years later, we commemorate those we lost to the virus and those we discharged safely to their loved ones. The challenges continue, but we are optimistic about what’s ahead. Together, we are moving forward with hope.
How Did COVID-19 Push Medicine Forward?
The COVID-19 pandemic has been difficult time. In many ways it has also pushed medicine forward, accelerating many developments in medicine that would have taken decades to happen under normal circumstances. We asked team members from across Johns Hopkins Medicine what they thought were the big ideas that emerged as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Additional Commemoration Events
Innovations and Research Gained During the Pandemic
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Precision Medicine: Advances in COVID-19 Research and Patient Care
Learn about the Johns Hopkins Precision Medicine Center of Excellence for COVID-19.
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Johns Hopkins Research Offers Lessons Learned from Patients with COVID-19
“Prediction model” can help hospitals forecast which patients’ conditions are likely to worsen.
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COVID Speed
Johns Hopkins experts discuss 8 ways COVID-19 has pushed medicine forward to the benefit of patients, trainees and biomedical science.
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Long History of Responding to National Health Crises
View a Johns Hopkins Medicine timeline of how the institution’s swift, innovative response to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic is emblematic of the institution’s history of rising to the challenge of national health crises.
One-Year Commemoration Video Gallery
'We are Resilient': Liz Fox Shares Her Experience With COVID-19 One Year After Her Diagnosis
New York resident Liz Fox, one of the first people diagnosed with COVID-19 at a Johns Hopkins hospital, says she was ‘terrified’ when she was told she had the virus. An emotional Fox shares her gratitude for the care she received from nurses and doctors.