Houston physician researcher Dr. Eric Salazar was at the forefront of the first convalescent plasma treatment for coronavirus.
In March, Houston Methodist became the first academic medical center in the country to give critically ill patient convalescent plasma therapy, and the Mexican American doctor was the principal investigator on the project.
Patricia Rojas is a registered nurse at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center.
As she treated the terrifying surge of COVID-19 patients, Rojas remembered what Dominican used to do when she was growing up—to look out for neighbors and "take care of each other."
Oscar Sánchez is a critical care nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital.
“It felt like every day you were going to war. It was like if you were in the Army," said the Dominican American nurse who first came to the U.S. as an international student to learn English. "I’d like to see more of a mandate on a national level to wear a mask."
Monica Escobar is a registered nurse in the intensive care unit at Los Angeles County+USC Medical Center.
Of Mexican and Guatemalan heritage, Escobar works at a hospital in the predominantly Latino neighborhood of Boyle Heights. The hardest part is "being the last person" to talk and comfort the coronavirus patients who passed away.
Dr. Thomas Ardiles is a Peruvian American pulmonologist and critical care doctor in Phoenix, Arizona.
"Latinos are particularly affected because of issues related to access to health care and because many tend to live in close proximity, even among generations." Everyone in the country has to "empathize with the suffering of your neighbor" and follow social guidelines, he says.
Marajazmin "MJ" Martinez is a medical assistant in California's Adventist Health Lodi Memorial Hospital.
The Latina and first-generation Mexican American translates crucial coronavirus information to patients in the state's central valley, home to many Latinos. "The most challenging part of my job, the hardest part, is having to deliver bad news."
Dr. Yvette Calderon, chair of emergency medicine at Mount Sinai Beth Israel Hospital, was on the front lines of the nation's first massive coronavirus outbreak.
Dr. Yvette Calderon, chair of emergency medicine at Mount Sinai Beth Israel Hospital, was on the front lines of the nation's first massive coronavirus outbreak.
“The emergency room is all about crisis," says the native New Yorker of Puerto Rican heritage. "We are trained to see death—but no one was trained to deal with surges of patients every single day." She personally suffered a COVID-19 loss.
Dr. Rafael Paez, who grew up in Cuba, is a pulmonologist and critical care doctor who treated some of the first COVID-19 cases in Nashville.
Helping care for critically ill patients was challenging at first because of the lack of information. Now, a large volume of medical literature published daily, which "means society has really invested in trying to find a way to take care of the disease."
Dr. Maria Alcaide is leading a coronavirus vaccine trial as she studies the spread and effects of the disease.
"As infectious disease doctors, we always try to be ahead, thinking of what's going to happen," said Alcaide, director of infectious diseases research at the University of Miami Health System. "But this was different.
Dr. Olveen Carrasquillo, a chief of general medicine in Miami, is leading a vaccine trial using his experience in minority health.
"COVID is affecting more Latinos and Blacks, but they're not being represented in studies. That worries us," says the research doctor of Puerto Rican heritage.