On its first day, the site ran out of test supplies in three hours.
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The site is located at Houston Community College's Felix Fraga Campus at 301 Drennan near Navigation. It's open all week from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
"Our Hispanic community is being hit hard with this virus," State Representative Christina Morales told ABC13 outside the testing site. "This particular site can serve Second Ward. It can even extend over to Third Ward, Fifth Ward, Denver Harbor. There are many communities that can be serviced by this site here, so it's so important."
Harris County is also doing what it can to reach out to underserved communities.
"We've been doing mobile testing," said Dr. Umair Shah, the Harris County Public Health director. "And, we're also looking at where we have disproportionately impacted communities to make sure our testing is also located geographically there."
Earlier this month, a new report from the CDC said Hispanics are four times more likely to need hospitalization because of the virus than a white, non-Hispanic person.
"If you look at death rates, 37 percent, so a little more than one out of three deaths are from Hispanics, but they only represent 18 percent of the population, so they are over represented in deaths as well," Catherine Troisi, infectious disease epidemiologist with UT Health, said.
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Troisi attributes the numbers to three factors: living, work and health conditions.
"They may be more likely to live in multi-generational households, so higher population and older seniors who would be at higher risk if they got infected," Troisi said.
She said that Hispanic and Latin people are predisposed to underlying health inequities.
"Like diabetes, which is higher among the Hispanic population, and we know that is a risk factor," Troisi said.
Several experts pointed out that Hispanics are typically falling under the "essential worker" category and have not been able to isolate throughout the pandemic.
READ MORE: Hispanics 4 times more likely to be hospitalized from COVID-19, CDC says
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To help lower those numbers and make sure the Hispanic community has the COVID-19 information it needs, the City of Houston started a 21-day COVID-19 outreach initiative called Todos Juntos Mejor, or, Together Everybody Is Better.
The goal is to reach under served Hispanic communities, so they get tested and understand their immigration status won't be asked at these testing sites.
You don't need an appointment, and you don't have to be showing symptoms to be tested.
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