I'll reinforce what Ms. May just said, but I would also like to provide another example. One of the projects that we've been working on as a collaboration of organizations has to do with this intersection of racism and exposure to toxins. One of the things that we know—and this is documented in both epidemiological and medical literature and also in literature in the social sciences—is that products that contain higher levels of toxins are often targeted, advertised, to racialized people.
For example, we see racialized women, particularly Black women, using products to straighten their hair and to bleach their skin in an effort to conform to western beauty ideals, and these are leading to higher rates of breast cancer, cysts, other reproductive harms, respiratory problems and skin sensitization.
There are different ways we see this problem, and it's not just in the external environments we're living in and the pollutants we're exposed to, but also in these more subtle ways that exposures happen by particular populations.