A nurse places a pulse oximeter to measure the oxygen level and heart rate of a man who is recovering from pneumonia at his home, Thursday, July 9, 2020, in Ipswich, Mass. One saving grace amid the devastation of COVID-19 pandemic has been that the vast majority of those infected are able to recover at home, allowing hospitals to cope with what would otherwise have been a system-crushing onslaught of ill, contagious patients.THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Elise Amendola TORONTO One saving grace amid the devastation of COVID-19 has been that the vast majority of those infected are able to recover at home, allowing hospitals to cope with what would otherwise have been a system-crushing onslaught of ill, contagious patients.
Colin Perkel
A nurse places a pulse oximeter to measure the oxygen level and heart rate of a man who is recovering from pneumonia at his home, Thursday, July 9, 2020, in Ipswich, Mass. One saving grace amid the devastation of COVID-19 pandemic has been that the vast majority of those infected are able to recover at home, allowing hospitals to cope with what would otherwise have been a system-crushing onslaught of ill, contagious patients.THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Elise Amendola February 04, 2021 - 9:49 AM
TORONTO - One saving grace amid the devastation of COVID-19 has been that the vast majority of those infected are able to recover at home, allowing hospitals to cope with what would otherwise have been a system-crushing onslaught of ill, contagious patients.