Thanks for that question.
I'll start, and then I'll ask Mr. Nickerson to round it out.
Thinking of human rights through our lens of humanitarian response, we're concerned about access to health care. We're concerned about access to food and water. Yes, we have very real, very tangible examples where restrictions on people's movements—forced quarantine, or being forced to stay in confined locations—have diminished people's access to those three things. It's that two-way...in terms of people's access to move around to access such services and in terms of humanitarian actors, such as MSF, being able to move around to deliver those services.
I'll ask Mr. Nickerson to round that out.