We are living through history right now. But how will the story of the pandemic be told in years to come?
Life in 2021 may at the moment feel isolating, frustrating and gloomy, but there is the occasional promise of hope.
It s not easy. More than 2 million people across the world have now died with COVID-19.
As part of a special series on the Sky News Daily podcast, our home editor Jason Farrell travels around the UK looking at the human impact of the crisis, speaking to real people about the real issues many of us are facing.
In this episode, we focus on young people and education as Jason visits Gateshead and Skegness.
The UK is immunising the elderly and most vulnerable groups first in the fight against coronavirus - with healthcare workers and carers also a priority.
In Indonesia, they are doing things differently, with 18 to 59 year olds at the front of the queue.
The strategy is perhaps ethically questionable, leaving those most at risk of falling seriously ill or worse vulnerable.
But might the move actually be a smart idea?
On this edition of the Sky News Daily podcast with Dermot Murnaghan, our South East Asia correspondent Siobhan Robbins explains more about Indonesia s COVID vaccine rollout. Advertisement
We are also joined by Senior Research Fellow on the Oxford Martin Programme on Collective Responsibility for Infectious Disease, Alberto Giubilini and GP Ellie Cannon, who participated in the Oxford Vaccine Trial.