Opinion
I am 82 years old with underlying health conditions and I feel a sense of calm and control in the face of coronavirus because I have planned for my death, author Diana Melly writes.
We will need the skills of migrants and refugees in future. They are keen and ready to help during the pandemic, writes Rossella Pagliuchi-Lor.
I feel as though I need to state the obvious: there is huge potential for tragedy if this experiment goes wrong.
My husband works as a doctor, and I am needed in a very different but equally important way. It’s what I call ‘holding the fort', writes Tasnim Nazeer.
The ongoing challenge for government is to keep older white men on their side as social distancing measures drag on, writes Richard Stokoe.
The pandemic is once again exposing substandard living conditions that wrongly damage the health of our nation, write Alun Humphrey and Nancy Kelley.
We are constantly told that the virus does not discriminate. But it does, in a very real way, writes Rachael Revesz.
Being a young carer is a pretty invisible role, and an incredibly tough one at the best of times, writes Feylyn Lewis.
Existing structural inequalities means that some groups are more likely to bear the brunt of the virus, writes Zubaida Haque.
We cannot reverse the irreversible, but we can make it free of pain and loneliness, writes Sarah Simons.