Counting the Bay Area s lost lives during the coronavirus pandemic
Chronicle staff
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Todd Trumbull
COVID-19 has claimed more than 2.6 million lives worldwide since the start of the pandemic with more than 5,500 of those deaths being Bay Area residents.
The first Bay Area virus-related death was reported March 9, 2020, more than a month after California’s first reported case. A later autopsy, however, linked the death of a Santa Clara County resident on Feb. 6 to the virus, which is believed to be the first virus-related death in the U.S.
While death counts remained low in the early stages of the pandemic, the winter surge brought overcrowded ICUs, unmanageable numbers of hospital patients and the loss of thousands of lives.
Holocaust survivor Berta Berkovich Kohút dies in San Rafael at 99
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Berta Berkovich was the last among 40 young Jewish women who survived Auschwitz by sewing cocktail dresses, ball gowns and fancy fashions for the wives of Nazi officers.Tom Areton 2019Show MoreShow Less
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In the fall of 2019, a British historian tracked down 98-year-old Berta Berkovich Kohút at her home in San Rafael to record her World War II story.
The tale took three days to tell. Kohút was the last among 40 young Jewish women who survived Auschwitz by sewing cocktail dresses, ball gowns and fancy fashions for the wives of Nazi officers.