The prime internet real estate known as the Google Doodle will be devoted to people on the front lines of the response to the coronavirus pandemic over the next two weeks.

Google Health chief health officer Karen DeSalvo wrote in a blog post, “This week, we’re beginning a series of Doodles to recognize the many people responding to Covid-19—from doctors and nurses caring for people on the front lines, to teachers and food service workers ensuring that essential goods and services are still available. Coinciding with the start of National Public Health Week in the U.S., our first Doodle in the series shines a light on the public health workers who are at the forefront of fighting this disease.”

She also outlined other ways Google is helping those on the front lines.

Google Cloud research credits are being provided to scientists, and DeSalvo said a coalition of leading research groups compiled over 44,000 scholarly articles related to the coronavirus on Google Cloud’s Kaggle data-science community.

A hosted repository of public datasets was made available via Google’s Covid-19 Public Dataset Program to aid researchers, data scientists and analysts, including data from the Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering, Global Health Data from the World Bank and OpenStreetMap data.

And last week, Google published an early release of its Covid-19 Community Mobility Reports to provide public health workers with insights via aggregated, anonymized data on movement trends across places such as retail and recreation, groceries and pharmacies.

DeSalvo wrote, “Today we salute public health workers who are playing an important role in responding to this pandemic. Over the next two weeks, our Doodles will honor other essential front-line workers, including healthcare workers, first responders and the many people keeping services like sanitation, food service, public transit, schools and more up and running. Thank you to all the people who are working to save lives and keep communities safe during this pandemic.”