The social determinants—and I think we refer to them often as communities or children at risk—have come very much to the front. A spotlight was placed upon it.
The Public Health Agency has worked with communities to try to address some of the issues around misinformation and disinformation for those communities that may be more at risk or more vulnerable, through programs such as the vaccine community innovation challenge, where communities themselves try to promote and create communication efforts in a language that represents or reflects the communities themselves, to try to increase uptake on some of those guidelines that the Public Health Agency has provided.
In addition, the Public Health Agency of Canada has currently put forward approximately $100 million over the next two or three years—and I'll have to come back with details in writing—to address mental health programming for those communities specifically.
Those are the projects tailored to racialized communities, indigenous communities, children with disabilities and those living with disabilities, etc., to try to have targeted investments within those communities that are more at risk.