result in more severe illness and tragically result in more severe illness and tragically more people will die. surging tragically more people will die. surging level of will also result in many surging level of will also result in many more people being off work due to mild many more people being off work due to mild illness and isolation so the impact to mild illness and isolation so the impact on to mild illness and isolation so the impact on our economy and on our ability impact on our economy and on our ability to impact on our economy and on our ability to deliver critical services will also ability to deliver critical services will also be severe. we are starting to see will also be severe. we are starting to see these impacts already. all of this explains why we must take omicron this explains why we must take omicron extremely seriously. this is not a omicron extremely seriously. this is not a choice omicron extremely seriously. this is not a choice betwe
76% of adults in the united states have now received at least one dose of the coronavirus vaccine. but in some latino communities, there is still some vaccine hesitancy. many factors are at play, including disinformation, pushed in some cases by political or religious leaders, and fears about missing work due to side effects, among other things. nbc news correspondent antonia hilton zeros in on a texas suburb combatting exactly those challenges. reporter: just outside austin, texas, snappy snacks is known for supplying food truck operators with ingredients, ice, and now vaccines. paul saldania leads the latino coordination, a grassroots group of operators that join with snappy snacks to meet high-risk latinos where they are. we have parts that have no infrastructure, no health clinics, no pharmacies.