Nottinghamshire Live has launched a unique survey aimed at understanding British life under coronavirus lockdown.
We want to know your experiences of this period, so that we can paint a detailed picture of the extraordinary times we are living through.
Britain has never before dealt with a crisis of this nature, a global health emergency that has sent shock waves through our way of life, our outlook and our economy.
So the Great Big Lockdown Survey poses an array of questions about your hopes and fears during the pandemic, your sense of how it is being handled, how your life has changed since the outbreak and how you think it might change on the other side.
That includes the impact on your finances, mental health and general well-being but also how your habits and priorities may have altered.
From struggling to keep a business afloat to the experience of redundancy or furlough, from applying for benefits to accessing food and advice, from the effect on your children to your work-life balance, cooking habits and entertainment under lockdown, we aim to provide a snapshot of an unprecedented era.
We want to know about the true impact of isolation, but also whether the crisis has brought communities closer together, as people have come to rely more on the kindness of friends and neighbours.
The survey takes just a few minutes to fill in and is being run across dozens of different news titles in our organisation, so that we can reveal how experiences differ from neighbourhood to neighbourhood, town to town, city to city.
If it feels like we are living through history, it’s because we are - and this is your chance to help us record it.
It comes after it was confirmed six more patients died in Nottingham's hospitals after testing positive for the virus - bringing the city's death toll to nearly 200.
Nottingham University Hospitals, which runs the QMC and City Hospital, announced the deaths on Wednesday, April 29, taking the trust's virus death toll to 195 since the start of March.
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The patients were aged between 77 and 92, and died between April 26 and 28.
According to the latest Public Health England figures, there have been 165,221 confirmed cases in the UK.
As of Wednesday's figures, 488 people have tested positive in the city and 1,030 in the wider county.