It’s just one of a host of life-altering measures taken to preserve public health, and it has ripple effects: rising child care costs for parents, suppliers losing out on cafeteria food orders, babysitters and nannies in flux, and loneliness and tech glitches for kids in online classes, to name a few.

Here are the latest updates and maps of where the virus has spread.

Exceptions: To maintain some sense of normalcy, performers and artists of all kinds are honing their show-must-go-on creativity. One Swiss pianist learned a complex score made for a 100-person ensemble in a day, after an orchestra was quarantined.

Another angle: The stigma is real for ex-Diamond Princess passengers, even those without symptoms, as their friends ghost them, neighbors shun them and strangers threaten them.

Elsewhere in the world:

Los Angeles County declared a state of emergency as it confirmed six new cases, and the U.S. death toll reached 11 people. A cluster of the virus grew in New York, as officials pledged to disinfect the subway regularly.

Italy surpassed 3,000 cases and 100 deaths; French officials discouraged the customary cheek-kiss greeting; and Britain saw a sharp increase to 85 cases, up from 51 on Tuesday.

All eyes are on Holi next week, India’s huge festival that brings crowds across the country, after its cases jumped to at least 28. Officials implemented airport screenings and visa restrictions.

In other news: “Contagion,” Steven Soderbergh’s 2011 thriller about a fictional pandemic, has shot up in popularity since the start of the virus.