
A Timeline of COVID-19 Developments in 2020
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) dominated 2020. This is a look back at how the pandemic evolved and progressed through the year, which closed with the arrival of vaccines, but also continued challenges.
Updated January 1, 2021
As the year ended, the United States surpassed 20 million infections from SARS-CoV-2, and more than 346,000 deaths. Globally, cases rose to 83,832,334 and 1,824,590 deaths.
Cases in some parts of the country began surging again in the weeks after Thanksgiving; the same effect may be seen in January as health officials are gravely concerned about the extent of travel for the Christmas and winter holidays. The Transportation Security Administration said it
While vaccines began to roll out in the last month of the year, distribution challenges became evident and the United States fell short of its goal of providing an initial dose to 20 million people by December 31.
This is an updated look at how the pandemic progressed throughout 2020.
January 9 — WHO Announces Mysterious Coronavirus-Related Pneumonia in Wuhan, China
At this point, the World Health Organization (WHO) still has doubts about the roots of what would become the COVID-19 pandemic, noting that the spate of pneumonia-like cases in Wuhan
January 20 — CDC Says 3 US Airports Will Begin Screening for Coronavirus
Three additional cases of what is now the 2019 novel coronavirus are reported in Thailand and Japan,
January 21 — CDC Confirms First US Coronavirus Case
A Washington state resident becomes the first person in the United States with
January 21 — Chinese Scientist Confirms COVID-19 Human Transmission
January 23 — Wuhan Now Under Quarantine
In just 2 days, 13 more people died and an additional 300 were sickened.
January 31 — WHO Issues Global Health Emergency
With a worldwide death toll of more than 200 and an exponential jump to more than 9800 cases, the WHO finally declares
February 2 — Global Air Travel Is Restricted
By 5 pm on Sunday, those en route to the United States
February 3 — US Declares Public Health Emergency
The Trump administration
February 10 — China’s COVID-19 Deaths Exceed Those of SARS Crisis
The COVID-19 death toll
February 25 — CDC Says COVID-19 Is Heading Toward Pandemic Status
Explaining what would signify a pandemic, Nancy Messonnier, MD, director of the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases,
March 6 — 21 Passengers on California Cruise Ship Test Positive
Twenty-one people of just 46 tested aboard a cruise ship carrying more than 3500 people off the California coast test
March 11 — WHO Declares COVID-19 a Pandemic
In
March 13 — Trump Declares COVID-19 a National Emergency
President Donald Trump
March 13 — Travel Ban on Non-US Citizens Traveling From Europe Goes Into Effect
The Trump administration
March 17 — University of Minnesota Begins Testing Hydroxychloroquine
The University of Minnesota launches a clinical
March 17 — CMS Temporarily Expands Use of Telehealth
CMS
March 17 — Administration Asks Congress to Send Americans Direct Financial Relief
Trump
March 19 — California Issues Statewide Stay-at-Home Order
California becomes the first state to issue a stay-at-home
March 24 — With Clinical Trials on Hold, Innovation Stalls
Overwhelmed hospitals are keeping out everyone who does not need to be there, and that means delaying the start of new clinical trials, according to an interview. The Center for Biosimilars®
March 25 — Reports Find Extended Shutdowns Can Delay Second Wave
Mathematical
March 26 — Senate Passes CARES Act
The Senate
March 27 — Trump Signs CARES Act Into Law
The House of Representatives
March 30 — FDA Authorizes Use of Hydroxychloroquine
FDA issues an
March 31 — COVID-19 Can Be Transmitted Through the Eye
A
April 8 — Troubles With the COVID-19 Cocktail
“What do you have to lose?” Trump asks when touting the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine or the related chloroquine as possible treatments for COVID-19. With a common antibiotic, azithromycin, the drug cocktail becomes an
April 16 — “Gating Criteria” Emerge as a Way to Reopen the Economy
After Trump briefly entertains the idea of reopening the US economy in time for Easter Sunday, the
April 28 — Young, Poor Avoid Care for COVID-19 Symptoms
As the pandemic lingers, the term “deferred care” caught fire in health care circles—referring to the fact that many would avoid a doctor’s office or hospital for any procedure that could wait. But a
April 29 — NIH Trial Shows Early Promise for Remdesivir
National Institutes of Health (NIH) trial data, which are not peer reviewed,
May 1 — Remdesivir Wins EUA
Shortly after the trial data are published,
May 9 — Saliva-Based Diagnostic Test Allowed for At-Home Use
The
May 12 — Death Toll Likely Underestimated, Fauci Testifies
Anthony Fauci, MD, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, testifies before the US Senate
May 21 — United States and AstraZeneca Form Vaccine Deal
The Trump administration and AstraZeneca announce a collaboration to speed development of a
May 28 — US COVID-19 Deaths Pass the 100,000 Mark
The
June 4 — Lancet, NEJM Retract COVID-19 Studies on Hydroxychloroquine
On the same day, The New England Journal of Medicine and The Lancet both
June 10 — US COVID-19 Cases Reach 2 Million
The number of confirmed cases of COVID-19
June 16 — HHS Announces COVID-19 Vaccine Doses Will Be Free for Some
Officials associated with the United States’ Operation Warp Speed, a project to rapidly develop and deploy a COVID-19 vaccine, explain that the vaccine would be
June 18 — WHO Ends Study Into Hydroxychloroquine
WHO announces it will
June 20 — NIH Halts Trial of Hydroxychloroquine
Just days after WHO ended its own trial, the NIH announces it is
June 22 — Study Suggests 80% of Cases in March Went Undetected
A study in Science Translation Medicine
June 26 — White House Coronavirus Task Force Addresses Rising Cases in the South
For the first time in 2 months, the White House Coronavirus Task Force
June 29 — Gilead Sets Price for Remdesivir at $3120
Gilead Sciences
June 30 — Fauci Warns New COVID-19 Cases Could Hit 100,000 a Day
In his appearance before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee,
July 2 — States Reverse Reopening Plans
Several states, including California and Indiana,
July 6 — Scientists, Citing Airborne Transmission, Ask WHO to Revise Guidance
Hundreds of scientists call on the WHO to revise recommendations on COVID-19 to better reflect its potential for
July 7 — CMS Plans to Pay More for Home Dialysis Equipment
CMS proposes a
July 7 — US Surpasses 3 Million Infections, Begins WHO Withdrawal
The same day that the United States reports 3 million COVID-19 infections, the nation begins its
July 9 — WHO Announces COVID-19 Can Be Airborne
July 14 — States With COVID-19 Spikes Report Greatest Health Insurance Coverage Losses
As of May 2020, states with the greatest percentage of nonelderly adults who are currently
July 14 — Early Moderna Data Point to Vaccine Candidate’s Efficacy
Data from phase 1/2 trials of Moderna Inc’s COVID-19 vaccine show that doses produced
July 15 — New Hospital Data Reporting Protocol Prompts Concern
An announcement mandates that all hospitals must
July 16 — US Reports New Record of Daily COVID-19 Cases
The United States reported a record
July 20 — Diagnostic Delays From COVID-19 May Increase Cancer-Related Deaths
The next several years could bear witness to thousands of
July 21 — Vaccines From AstraZeneca, CanSino Biologics Show Promising Results
Two experimental vaccines, one from AstraZeneca and the other from CanSino Biologics,
July 22 — HHS, DOD Announce Vaccine Distribution Agreement With Pfizer and BioNTech
HHS and the Department of Defense (DOD)
July 23 — Antibody Levels Drop After First 3 Months of COVID-19 Infection
Findings from a research letter published in the New England Journal of Medicine indicate that
July 23 — Antibody Cocktail May Treat, Prevent COVID-19
Researchers conceive of
July 27 — Moderna Vaccine Begins Phase 3 Trial, Receives $472M From Trump Administration
In beginning the first phase 3 clinical trial to examine a vaccine candidate against COVID-19,
July 27 — Senate Introduces HEALS Act
Republicans introduce
July 29 — FDA Grants Truvian EUA for Rapid Antibody Test
August 3 — New US Pandemic Phase; US to Pay Sanofi, GlaxoSmithKline $2B for Vaccine
Coronavirus response coordinator Deborah Birx, MD, says the United States has entered
August 4 — Rural Hotspots Face Lack of Intensive Care Unit Beds
Almost 5 months after the pandemic was declared a national emergency in the United States, 49% of low-income areas
August 7 — Talks Stall on Second Relief Package
Stimulus checks from the first package rolled out seemingly quickly, but
August 11 — Trump Administration Reaches Deal With Moderna
Despite still waiting on final data, the Trump administration reportedly agrees to pay
August 12 — Severe Obesity Increases Mortality Risk From COVID-19
Investigators from Kaiser Permanente publish their findings showing that patients with a body mass index (BMI) of 40 to 44 kg/m2 have a
August 13 — Biden Calls for 3-Month Mask Mandate
Still a presidential nominee, Joe Biden calls on all governors to require their citizens
August 15 — FDA Approves Saliva Test
The federal agency
August 17 — COVID-19 Now the Third-Leading Cause of Death in the US
In just 4 days, there’s been a 3.2% uptick in COVID-19–related deaths, to 170,434, giving the disease
August 23 — Convalescent Plasma Is Cleared for Use by FDA
The FDA issues another EUA, this time for
August 24 — Remdesivir’s Clinical Benefits Questioned
A global, multicenter study finds that the antiviral drug remdesivir had little effect on patients
August 25 — CDC Changes Testing Guidance, but Later Reverses Itself
The CDC quietly changes its guidance on who should get tested for COVID-19, saying that individuals who are asymptomatic, but have been exposed, do
August 26 — FDA Grants EUA to Abbott’s Rapid Test
A portable rapid
August 28 — First Known Case of COVID-19 Reinfection Reported in the US
A 25-year-old man from Nevada
September 1 — US Rejects WHO Global COVID-19 Vaccine Effort
The United States says it will not participate in an initiative by the WHO to develop, make, and distribute a COVID-19
September 3 — Steroids Reduce Mortality in Severe Cases; Sanofi, GSK Begin Human Vaccine Trials
Three studies report that inexpensive
Additionally, Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)
September 3 — Bioethicists Weigh In on Equitable Vaccine Distribution
Nineteen bioethicists outline measures for equitable distribution of limited supplies of any COVID-19
September 8 — AstraZeneca Halts Phase 3 Vaccine Trial
The phase 3 trial for AstraZeneca’s potential COVID-19 vaccine is
September 14 — US Airports Stop Screening International Travelers
The government announces it will
September 14 — Pfizer, BioNTech Expand Phase 3 Trial
After initially aiming to recruit 30,000 participants, Pfizer and BioNTech announce they will
September 14 — NIH Launches Investigation Into Halted Astrazeneca Trial
After AstraZeneca put its phase 3 trial on hold, the NIH announces it is
September 15 — CDC Reports on Spread of COVID-19 at Restaurants
A
September 16 — Trump Administration Releases Vaccine Distribution Plan
A
September 17 — Europe Reports Rising COVID-19 Cases
Europe reports
September 21 — CDC Pulls Guidance Saying COVID-19 Transmission Is Airborne
The CDC
September 21 — Johnson & Johnson Begins Phase 3 Vaccine Trial
Johnson & Johnson announces that it began a
September 23 — A New, More Contagious Strain of COVID-19 Is Discovered
A study conducted at Houston Methodist Hospital finds
September 25 — Midwest States See Increase in COVID-19 Cases
Over the course of September, Midwest states experience a
September 28 — Global COVID-19 Deaths Surpass 1 Million
The number of deaths linked to COVID-19 worldwide
September 29 — HHS to Distribute 100 Million Rapid Tests to States
HHS
September 29 — Regeneron Announces Positive Results for Monoclonal Antibody Treatment
Regeneron
October 2 — Trump, First Lady Test Positive for COVID-19; Trump Enters Hospital
October 5 — Trump Leaves Hospital, Continues Receiving Treatment
After 3 days, Trump is
October 8 — NEJM Criticizes Trump’s COVID-19 Response; 39 States See Case Spikes
In an editorial published by the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), 34 editors
Additionally, 39 states report seeing a rise in COVID-19 cases. Nine states set 7-day records for infections, and Wisconsin and Hawaii report a record number for deaths in a 7-day period.
October 8 — More Americans Trust Biden to Lead Health Care System
A poll released on this date by
October 8 — White House COVID-19 Outbreak Grows to 34
By this date, the cluster of people infected by the COVID-19 outbreak connected to the Rose Garden ceremony for Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett has grown to 34, including several White House staff members, according to
October 9 — US Signs Deal With AstraZeneca
The Trump administration signed a $486 million agreement with AstraZeneca to
October 12 — Johnson & Johnson Halts Vaccine Trial
Johnson & Johnson halts recruitment for its phase 3 ENSEMBLE trial for its COVID-19 vaccine halts vaccine trial over a patient’s
October 15 — US Cases Spike Again; Studies Connect Blood Type and COVID-19 Risk
The United States
A pair of studies in Blood Advance suggest that the risk of becoming infected with COVID-19 or developing life-threatening complications from the virus might be related to blood type. Researchers caution that the results do not point to any blood type being completely protective or vulnerable to the virus.
October 19 — Global Cases Top 40 Million
Data from Johns Hopkins University indicate that COVID-19 cases have
October 22 — FDA Approves Remdesivir as First COVID-19 Drug
Gilead’s remdesivir is the
October 23 — AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson Announce Restart of COVID-19 Vaccine Trials
AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson announce plans to
October 28 — CMS Issues Vaccine, Treatment Coverage Rules
CMS
November 4 — US Reports Unprecedented 100,000 Cases in 1 Day
The US hits a grim milestone with
November 5 — Study Predicts Difficulties in Nationwide COVID-19 Immunity
An
November 9 — President-Elect Biden Announces COVID-19 Transition Team; Pfizer Publishes Vaccine Results
After former Vice President Joe Biden is
November 9 — FDA Issues EUA for Eli Lilly’s Antibody Treatment
The FDA
November 11 — Indoor Venues Responsible for Much of COVID-19’s Spread
A new study in Nature observes that most new cases of COVID-19
November 16 — Moderna Reveals Vaccine Efficacy Results
The positive vaccine news
November 16 — FDA to Move Rapidly on EUAs for Pfizer, Moderna Vaccines
On CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” HHS Secretary Alex Azar
November 17 — Fauci Highlights the Need for Long-term Follow-up of COVID-19 Effects
During a talk at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions,
November 18 — Pfizer, BioNTech Vaccine Is 95% Effective
The results of a nearly 44,000-person trial demonstrate that the COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech
November 20 — Pfizer, BioNTech Submit EUA Application; CDC Warns Against Holiday Travel
Pfizer and BioNTech
At the same time, the CDC urges Americans to stay home for Thanksgiving amid national spikes in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations. The agency recommends that people avoid mingling with people who have not resided in their household for the last 14 days. As cases in the United States surpass 11 million, CDC officials worry that the situation could worsen during the holiday season.
November 23 — AstraZeneca Reports Vaccine Is 90% Effective; FDA Grants EUA for Second Antibody Treatment
When AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine is administered as a half dose followed by a full dose at least a month later, it can be
Meanwhile, the FDA grants an EUA for a second COVID-19 antibody treatment. The cocktail, manufactured by Regeneron, was administered to Trump when he was battling COVID-19 at the beginning of October. In a clinical trial of 800 people, the treatment significantly reduced virus levels within days.
December 10 — FDA Advisory Panel Recommends Pfizer, BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine
An FDA advisory panel
December 11 — FDA Agrees to EUA for COVID-19 Vaccine From Pfizer, BioNTech
A day after the panel votes, the FDA
December 17 — FDA Panel Backs Moderna COVID-19 Vaccine
A week after hearing the application for the country’s first COVID-19 vaccine, the same FDA advisory panel
December 18 — FDA Signs Off on EUA for Moderna's COVID-19 Vaccine
The
December 21 — New COVID-19 Variant Circling the UK
The
December 23 — US Buys More Pfizer Vaccine
The Trump administration
December 28 — Novavax Starts Phase 3 Trial of COVID-19 Vaccine
Novavax
December 29 — First US Case of New COVID-19 Variant Found in Colorado
The recently discovered novel variant found a week prior in the United Kingdom
December 30 — UK Approves Emergency Authorization for the AstraZeneca and Oxford COVID-19 Vaccine
As UK cases surge,
December 31 —US Falls Short of Goal to Give 20 Million Vaccinations by Year End
As the
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