Millions around the world have been infected and thousands in the UK have died of coronavirus, more than 100 of them health workers.

It is easy to get angry, and it’s tempting to look for someone to blame. You could look to China, you could blame the World Health Organisation. You could blame the Government. You could blame the British public, or the organisers of sporting events.

Watch the news and start searching the internet and you will find plenty of evidence to back your opinion up, whatever it is.

But not all of it will be reliable - and you may catch yourself ignoring the stuff that doesn't fit with your views.

When images of a nurse’s Twitter account appeared on social media this week, it was tempting to believe it was the work of a government known to be economical with the actuality.

But some have indicated the fake tweets may themselves have been fake, if that makes sense.

It’s understandable that people want the truth to fit their opinions, and there are those on all sides who might use the coronavirus crisis to push their own political ideology.

This paper has been contacted with a variety of claims - about death numbers, PPE, workers not doing what they should, working conditions.

Reporters have worked hard to verify them - and could not always get the proof they needed.

Some might have seemed 'good' stories on the surface. They may have been true, but we could not verify the source or the facts.

We shouldn’t suspend critical thinking just because we are angry, or think our leaders are idiots or saints. Maybe the Government has got some things wrong and some right.

There is and will be plenty of data about the coronavirus crisis. It needs to be scrutinised and will reveal blunders, missed opportunities, honest mistakes, correct decisions, good judgement and luck.

The truth may be - will be - messy, but it will still out.