“…In Canada, areas with the highest proportions of visible minorities had COVID-19-related death rates that were close to two times higher than areas with the lowest proportions; in Quebec and Ontario, the comparable death rate was three times higher, and in British Columbia, it was more than 10 times higher (Statistics Canada 2021). In Ontario, individuals have been at increased odds of a COVID-19 diagnosis and related hospitalizations and deaths if they live in areas with high household density, low educational attainment and larger proportions of recent immigrants (Sundaram et al 2020), challenging social determinants of health and measures of income inequality (Mishra et al 2021), higher ethno-cultural diversity (Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion 2020a) and neighbourhood material deprivation (Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion 2020b). Immigrants, refugees and other newcomers, who make up roughly 25% of the Ontario population and are more likely than the Canadian-born to be essential workers, accounted for 44% of all COVID-19 cases in the first wave (Guttmann et al 2020).…”