For Reuters photographer Hannah McKay, a recent trip to take pictures at a hospital in northern England required the kind of planning more typical of a foreign assignment.
The coronavirus pandemic has brought huge changes to the way journalists work the world over, with safety a priority, access organised long in advance, travel kept to a minimum and hotels and public transport largely out of bounds.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay sends a message from her mobile phone from a tent she is staying in overnight.
So when London-based McKay had the opportunity to travel north to cover medical workers in the cities of Blackburn and Burnley, careful planning was essential.
She divided the six-hour journey into two parts, sleeping in a tent in her parents' garden in Coventry before setting off the next morning. McKay and her parents found the experience strange.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Hannah’s father Jim carries a hot water bottle to her tent.
Jim McKay, the father of Reuters photographer Hannah McKay carries a hot water bottle to the tent that his daughter is sleeping in overnight, in the back garden of the family home in Coventry, following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Britain, May 13, 2020.
"I couldn't go in the front door, I couldn't go in the house and we couldn't hug," she recalled.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Hannah’s mother Chris carries a plate of dinner for her out of the kitchen of the family home.
Her mother cooked a curry for dinner and her parents sat on a bench in the garden while they ate, respecting social distancing rules.
After photographing medics on the frontline at the Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital, she was offered the use of one of dozens of motorhomes in the hospital car park where doctors and nurses have been staying to reduce the risk of spreading the coronavirus.
. Blackburn, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Motorhomes, where some medical staff are temporarily living, stand in a carpark during sunset, outside The Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital.
That allowed McKay, 32, to carry on working the next day, this time in a maternity ward at Burnley General Hospital.
It was there that she took a photograph of a nurse passing a newborn baby to its mother that featured prominently in British newspapers and on online news sites.
"To get a picture I was pleased with was great," McKay said. "I never expected it would get the kind of reaction it did."
. Blackburn, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay takes a picture of herself wearing PPE before entering the laundry and linen room at The Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital.
Before the pandemic struck, McKay had a packed summer of work ahead of her, including coverage of the Euros soccer tournament, the Wimbledon tennis championship and the Tokyo Olympics.
With all of those events off, she has been working full time in London.
"This job felt like it was my Olympics; it was the first time I had left London for ages," she said of her trip north last week. "I was so happy to be doing something normal but different."
. Blackburn, United Kingdom. Reuters/Emma Cooke
McKay photographs workers in the linen and laundry room at The Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital.
In Blackburn, McKay spent the day visiting as many hospital departments as possible, taking about 3,000 photographs in all.
Much of the time was spent changing in and out of protective clothing, under the close surveillance of hospital staff.
"I must have put on 20 masks throughout the day," she said.
. Burnley, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Kirsty Anderson rests with her premature baby Theo.
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The following day, in the nearby city of Burnley, she met a mother whose baby Theo, who was born prematurely, was in an incubator.
Her picture captured the moment when the tiny infant, in the hands of the nurse, stretched out its limbs while the mother prepared to take him.
The mother found McKay on Instagram and said the photograph meant that friends and family, who were unable to visit her in hospital because of the coronavirus, could now see how small Theo was.
"I'm going to send a copy to her for Theo's memory box," McKay said.
PHOTO EDITING MARIKA KOCHIASHVILI; LAYOUT JULIA DALRYMPLE
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Slideshow
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Jim greets Hannah from a social distance as he stands on the doorstep to the family home.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay watches as her father puts up a tent for her to sleep in.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay holds a plate of chicken curry as she eats her dinner in the back garden of her family home.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Hannah’s parents Chris and Jim eat an evening meal together social distancing from her.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Chris uses protective gloves to wash a dinner plate used by Hannah.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Chris blows a kiss goodnight to Hannah who is sleeping in a tent.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay prepares to brush her teeth in an alleyway after spending the night sleeping in a tent in the back garden of her family home.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
The sun rises over an alleyway behind a row of residential houses in Coventry.
. Blackburn, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay’s laptop and some snacks, are left on the bedside table of a motorhome she is staying in overnight in the car park of The Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital.
. Blackburn, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay edits images on her laptop as she lies on a bed in a motorhome she is staying in overnight, in the carpark at The Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital.
. Coventry, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay stops by a field during a car journey from Coventry to Blackburn.
. Burnley, United Kingdom. Reuters/Hannah McKay
McKay’s phone shows directions to her home in London.