We have been in COVID-19 mode for more than a year. All those social determinants of health that our Latinx communities share that includes our inability to telework because we have to be there as a frontline worker, providing care, providing services, providing food to our surrounding community, that has exposed us to the virus more than others. Many of these Latinx community members are also affected by not having adequate unemployment safety net for them to pull out and say, I'm going to hold off on working because I don't feel well. I don't have access to testing, and I'm going to try to work from home. The other area is lack of adequate information in the language and cultural equality that it delivers the message adequately. Lack of access to cultural competent and language competent medical care that we're working heavily to improve at UVA Health. Latinx communities, families live in conglomerative housing due to socioeconomic limitations, and that limits themselves to adequate social distancing before, during, and after COVID infection in the families. We are now in central Virginia, enjoying of more vaccine availability. And we should try, as we have done already with our UVA Health system, make the vaccine available where the people live, where the people struggle, in the language that they need it, with a cultural message so that we can mitigate hesitation and encourage people to get vaccinated as we make it more available for our community members.