It is 12 months since เล่น slotxo ผ่านเว็บ the UK entered lockdown. The anniversary brings to mind more than 146,000 UK mortalities ascribed to Covid-19 on death certificates. Of those, 9831 have been in Scotland.
Monitoring by Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore tells us there have been more than 2.72 million deaths worldwide, from more than 123m people infected.
In that year, there has also been a huge shift in the way we live our lives and the way the economy works. Here are some of the numbers that help tell the story:
11.2 million UK workers have been on furlough at some point in the past year, placed there by 1.3million employers. The Self-Employed Income Support Scheme has meant grants of up to £2,500 a month, reaching 2.2 million people - that is 65% of those thought to be eligible. Some 1.7 million self-employed workers did not qualify.
The total expected cost of the two income support schemes was estimated by the Office for Budget Responsibility this month to be £104bn.
Streaming video on demand has boomed, while cinemas had to close. More than half of UK homes are subscribers to Amazon Prime.
Home delivery has risen from 8.7% of total grocery sales in February last year to 15.4% this year, says Kantar data firm. A quarter of UK homes now use home deliveries, and three million tonnes of food have been delivered by retailers to homes in the past year.
More than half of adults are using video calls more during the pandemic, and 29% told the Office for National Statistics they will continue to do so after it is over. The market value of US media platform Zoom rose more than four-fold in the past year, to more than $100bn. However, psychologists say it has brought stress and anxiety as people have spent much longer looking at pictures of themselves.
Of UK adults, 38% told surveyors from ONS this month that they intend to avoid crowded public spaces following the pandemic.
In the year to January, there was a drop of 65,000 in the number of Scots in payrolled jobs, not including self-employed people. The UK-wide figures suggest half of the job losses - nearly 700,000 - have been in hospitality and nearly two-thirds have been people aged under 25.