The first results from the registry were presented as Late-Breaking Science talks at the 2020 AHA Scientific Sessions, with two papers published simultaneously in Circulation. We showed that 58% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 were either Black or Hispanic, with more than 50% of deaths occurring in these two racial/ethnic groups. Adjusted in-hospital rates of death and adverse cardiac events were similar for Black and Hispanic vs. White patients, which indicates that the drivers for the racial/ethnic disparities in COVID-19 outcomes lie upstream of the hospital and reflect longstanding social and health inequities in the community. We also showed that cardiac and thromboembolic complications occurred in an important minority of patients but were less common than we initially feared, with fewer than 10% suffering a major cardiac complication and only 4% a DVT or PE. Through the end of September, mortality from hospitalized COVID-19 was 17%, with 1 in 10 of those deaths from a cardiac cause. Most patients hospitalized with COVID-19 had cardiovascular disease risk factors. As reported by Drs. Nicholas Hendren and Justin Grodin, obesity was an important risk factor for hospitalization with COVID-19 and for mechanical ventilation and death among those hospitalized. The hazards of obesity, and particularly severe obesity (BMI ≥ 40 kg/m2), were magnified in young people. This finding has important public health implications because obese young people may underestimate their risk for severe COVID-19 complications.