These two siblings have been reunited by Coronavirus.

COVID-19 makes us feel that it is the most tragic thing that happens to us this 2020. This two-woman proved that it is not the worst thing but the best thing that happened to them. These two siblings have reunited after 53 years at a rehabilitation center in Nebraska.

These two siblings have been reunited by Coronavirus.
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COVID-19 makes us feel that it is the most tragic thing that happens to us this 2020. This two-woman proved that it is not the worst thing but the best thing that happened to them. These two siblings have reunited after 53 years at a rehabilitation center in Nebraska.

While the other is getting treated for her COVID-19 infection, the other worked as a medical aide at the center where she found her sister's name on a patient board, according to CNN.

The two have not seen each other since they were younger, who is now 53, was a baby, although they have both searched for one another, according to The Washington Post.

Doris Crippen, a 73-year-old woman from Nebraska, was tested positive for the coronavirus in May, according to The Washington Post. After getting "weaker and weaker" because of the coronavirus, Crippen fell off her bed and broke her arm, The Washington Post reported. After she battled coronavirus and tested negative, she was hospitalized at Dunklau Gardens, a local rehabilitation center and nursing home roughly an hour away from Lincoln, Nebraska.

For over two decades, Crippen's half-sister, Bev Boro, a 53-year-old medication aide, had worked at Dunklau Gardens, according to CNN.

"I thought, 'Oh my God, I think this is my sister," CNN reported. On June 27, Boro reached out to confirm with Crippen that they were sisters, CNN reported.

It is true that this pandemic is not as bad as we thought it would be. It reunited this two siblings that part for so long.