Jon Snow has been the face of Channel 4 News since 1989.
Jon Snow joined ITN in 1976 and became Washington Correspondent in 1984. Since then, he has travelled the world to cover the news – from the fall of the Berlin Wall and the release of Nelson Mandela, to Barack Obama's inauguration and the earthquake in Haiti.
His many awards include the Richard Dimbleby Bafta award for Best Factual Contribution to Television (2005), and Royal Television Society awards for Journalist of the Year (2006) and Presenter of the Year (2009).
We spoke to Professor Devi Sridhar, who’s an international expert on global pandemic management.
We’re joined by Hugh Montgomery, Professor of Intensive Care Medicine at University College London.
We want to keep you regularly informed with all the facts you need about the virus.
Earlier, Jon Snow spoke to Dr Jenny Vaughan, a leading member of the Doctors’ Association
We spoke to Ian Goldin, a professor of globalisation and development at the University of Oxford.
In the light of international advice to avoid large public gatherings, with so many major events cancelled – some artists have taken the challenge to still give the fans a little of what they are missing.
We spoke to the former Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt who is now chair of the Health Select Committee. We started by asking him if he was satisfied that there will be enough ventilators to tackle the virus.
I spoke to Professor Giacomo Grasselli, an Italian government health official who is coordinating the network of intensive care units in Lombardy, the region where Cremona Hospital is.
There were no enforced quarantines announced earlier and no orders to close premises. But the advice was clear – a request to the public to do something difficult, disruptive.
Earlier Jon Snow spoke to the former health secretary Jeremy Hunt, who is now the Chairman of the Health Select Committee.
Jon spoke to lawyer Nury Turkel who is from the Muslim Uighur community, more than a million of whom are currently being held in camps by the Chinese authorities.
I spoke to Professor Giacomo Grasselli a senior Italian government health official who is coordinating the network of intensive care units in Lombardy.
‘Viruses are great equalisers, they don’t pay attention to borders’ – former USAID head Gayle Smith
Hossein Dehghan is tipped by some as a future President.
The country’s borders are closed not for political reasons but because surrounding countries worry about the outbreak of the coronavirus.