I would just give a few examples of what Ambassador Rae has just said. I was speaking this morning to a group of people in Burkina Faso who had been forced to flee their homes at gunpoint, basically, by terrorist organizations and are now living in a camp for displaced people that is very congested, with very little water and sanitation, and not much food. These are circumstances that the virus loves. The virus wants to circulate in circumstances like that.
I was speaking to my colleagues who are working in the Cox’s Bazar refugee camp, which David and I visited together in late 2017. I spoke to them again just a few days ago. This is what the virus likes, these kinds of conditions. We don't really know the death toll from COVID-19 in these places, because there's such a low level of testing and because there are many other things that vulnerable people are losing their lives to.
One thing that is striking is that in the midst of all of their other problems, people, when you talk to them in these settings, do talk about what an additional impact COVID has made, both in terms of the virus but also the consequences of the virus, which David and I were both talking about in our introductory remarks.
I'm sure David has things to add.