With respect to your comment on social inequality... not Madonna's plastic surgery.
Social disparities including population density, lifestyle, and occupation did impact Covid transmission rates and mortality rates. But at some level each individual should have done what they could to mitigate the incremental risk.
For example, exercising daily costs nothing and taking a vitamin pill with D and zinc in it is extremely cheap and yet people who exercise and maintain healthy vitamin D and zinc levels experienced very low mortality rates relative to their peers. Plenty of studies are available online for those interested.
Occupation is more difficult to address. Low-income people are more likely to hold public service jobs. These jobs put them in contract with more people and increased their risk of contracting Covid.
In hindsight and with foresight, it would made sense to assist people with high-risk health factors to transition to jobs with less face-to-face interaction with the public, if they chose that option.
Population density is the hard one to resolve. Poor people live in more crowded family units, more crowded housing, and more crowded neighborhoods. All of these factors contribute to more social contact and social contact translates into more disease transmission. Awareness of this risk means it is even more important that people living in these conditions regardless of economic status do all they can to boost their individual innate immunity systems and supplement that with vaccine- acquired immunity.
Christ made the observation more than 2000 years ago and I am certain that he was not the first one to do so, that the poor will always exist. Bemoaning this fact, won't change it. But helping the poor to understand their specific risks and things they can do to mitigate those risks would make sense. Sadly, I think the effort in this area was lacking.