Prince Harry is taking steps to address the coronavirus pandemic.

The royal urged the families of children with conditions that make them vulnerable to coronavirus to keep morale high and take care of each other and themselves in a recent video call.

While speaking virtually with parents, children and caretakers involved with Britain's WellChild charity, for which Harry is a patron, the royal, 35, acknowledged the way individuals are struggling to cope through "strange times."

"Everyone is experiencing the same thing in a very unique way. But the longer this goes on for, I imagine the harder it is for each and every one of you," he said. "The recovery is going to take a long time for everybody, especially for the child support sector and charities like WellChild. I think in the immediate time, it's really about supporting each other."

While people in Britain and across the world are under quarantine, Harry highlighted the importance of continuing communication online.

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"If the equipment is hard to get and it's hard to actually visit people, then just being able to speak to each other whether it's on Zoom, FaceTime, whatever it is, just to be able to communicate and draw some strength from other people," he said.

Giving a nod to his and Duchess Meghan's almost 1-year-old son, Archie, Harry praised the parents on the call for being able to handle quarantine with several children.

"Of course, there's going to be hard days. I can't even begin to imagine how hard it is for you guys," he said. "Having one kid, an 11-month-old, is tough. So to see you guys… honestly, so much respect to every single one of you."

He added: "It's really important for people to remember that just because you as a parent – or as anybody – can sit there smiling, being like, 'This is fine,' but what's actually going on in your mind and the experiences you've had over the last few weeks and in some cases, maybe years, the resilience and the strength that you guys have is absolutely incredible," he said. “You must never, ever, ever, ever forget that."

The royal also urged families to look for the "hell of a lot of positives," like the opportunity to get closer with each other and try new things or start new hobbies.

"It's all about morale," he said. "If morale is up, if you're waking up in the morning and going, 'Alright, new day, I've got my whole family here, what are we going to do?’ … I think when you've been through hard times, you really come out so much stronger – not just for yourself, not just for your family, but for other people as well."

Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan also pitched in to help with coronavirus relief efforts on Easter Sunday and Wednesday.

The couple volunteered with Project Angel Food, an organization that provides healthy food to those who living with serious illnesses, in Los Angeles to help alleviate the staff who've been working long hours to meet demand, according to a person familiar with the situation but not authorized to speak publicly confirmed to USA TODAY.

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