As a pandemic presses on, waves of grief follow its path

Dr. Hanna Sanoff poses for a portrait at UNC Hospitals in Chapel Hill, N.C., Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020. Grief is an inescapable part of the job for cancer doctors. “I have not yet figured out how to help guide patients’ struggles with cancer, leading them toward a death with dignity and finding personal reward in our relationship, when I cannot see them (or) hug them” she says. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

Dr. Hanna Sanoff poses for a portrait at UNC Hospitals in Chapel Hill, N.C., Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020. Grief is an inescapable part of the job for cancer doctors. “I have not yet figured out how to help guide patients’ struggles with cancer, leading them toward a death with dignity and finding personal reward in our relationship, when I cannot see them (or) hug them” she says. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

Hancock County coroner Adrick Ingram, 44, of Sparta, poses for a portrait on a deck next to a lake, Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020, in Sparta, Ga. The number of COVID-19 deaths in Hancock County is the highest per-capita rate of any U.S. county. ”It has affected our community in a way that I consider tragic,” Ingram says. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

This 2019 photo provided by Fiona Prine shows Prine and husband John in New Zealand. Both battled COVID-19, but John lost his life to the disease. (Fiona Prine via AP)

JJ Ivey, 13, center, Jay Johnson, 19, left, Te Moss, 18, back left, and Voen Ivey, 18, right, play basketball in their neighborhood in Hancock County, Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020, in Mayfield, Ga. Early on, victims of the coronavirus were mostly residents of the county’s two nursing homes. Now, it’s younger residents too. Coroner Adrick Ingram sees young people in town not wearing masks and gathering in big groups, and it frustrates him. ”I see people who aren’t taking it seriously, maybe because they don’t see what I see. They don’t get to look in people’s faces when they’ve lost somebody.” (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

In a strong voice tinged with her Irish homeland, Fiona Prine talks hauntingly about loss. From her COVID-19 infection and isolation — self-imposed in hopes of sparing her husband, folk-country legend John Prine — to his own devastating illness and death, she’s had more than her share in this year like no other.