View allAll Photos Tagged covidtesting

1st Regiment Cadets prepare for COVID-19 testing by walking in formation to the testing sites on May 24, 2021 at Ft. Knox, KY. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

A 1st Regiment Cadet gives thumbs up for COVID-19 testing on May 24, 2021 at Ft. Knox, KY as she walks onto the testing site. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

A Cadet from 1st Regiment assists the medical personnel by holding their COVID-19 testing bottle, waiting for the personnel to finish the test. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

U.S. Army Spc. Christina Adams, a patient administration specialist with the Delaware National Guard, uses a computer at a drive-thru testing site for COVID-19 on the grounds of Long Neck Elementary School in Millsboro, Delaware, June 16, 2020. About 10 Soldiers and Airmen with the Delaware National Guard supported the saliva-based testing of 115 people at the school location. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Capt. Brendan Mackie)

Abbey Prescott, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, has her first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp by the medical personnel testers on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Thomas Diamond, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, has his first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp by the medical personnel testers on Ft. Knox, KY, on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

This is my negative COVID test, Mikes will be published tomorrow when he does his second neg. I didn't grab a photo of his first test because we started using new test kits and I wanted to familiarize myself with the new test without the distraction of having to grab a photo.

Covid test upon arrival in Copenhagen Airport

Patrick Hann, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, has his first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp and holds the specimen bottle for the medical personnel testers on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021.The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Sunday morning I began feeling off, out of the blue for no reason, so I stopped what I was doing and took a rest.

Monday I was still feeling off, and wanted to get ahead of this bug so I made a pointless virtual visit where the doctor told me "maybe you're sick with Covid, maybe the flu, maybe none of it. But get a Covid test just to be sure." Thank you for telling me what I already knew.

This morning it has smacked me, and I am far too sick to even consider taking the test, but I know I need to make sure I can rule things out. If I have Covid, congrats: it took you four and a half years to find me, amigo.

 

Theme: Weight For Me

Year Sixteen Of My 365 Project

Abbey Prescott, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, has her first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp by the medical personnel testers on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Trent Larson, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, finishes his first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp on Ft. Knox, KY, on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Pfc. Jonah OShea of Medical Strike Team Iroquois mans a testing station at Kendal-Crosslands Nursing Home in Kennett Square, Pa., on May 26, 2020. Under guidance from the Pennsylvania Department of Health, and closely monitored by CDC officials, Pennsylvania National Guard members with Task Force Iroquois launched a Point Prevalence Sampling Strike Team at Kendal-Crosslands. The mission is designed to identify possible risks of exposure to COVID-19 by testing the entire staff and all residents of the facility. This is part of a series pilot program that will reach out across the state. (Photo by Master Sgt. George Roach)

Cadets from the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, line up before their COVID-19 tests on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Trent Larson, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, has his first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp by the medical personnel testers on Ft. Knox, KY, on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Soldiers prepare to receive patients at a Mobile Testing Team location at the Alabama-Coushatta Native American Reservation. T\Texas Army National Guard Soldiers comprising a Mobile Testing Team visited the Alabama-Coushatta Native American Reservation in Livingston, Texas, on May 11, 2020, to provide free COVID-19 testing to residents of the reservation. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Erin Castle)

A Cadet holds her COVID-19 testing bottle still for the medical tester to insert the tester into the bottle on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

A Cadet registers and waits for their COVID-19 testing label that will identify their individualized test on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Corbin Nicholson, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, finishes up his first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Jeffery Pams, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, has his first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp by medical personnel on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Jeffery Pams, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, has his first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp by medical personnel on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Patrick Hann, a Cadet with the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, has his first COVID-19 test of Advanced Camp and holds the specimen bottle for the medical personnel testers on Ft. Knox, KY on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Taken for JMU Technology & Design by Kendall Herlica. All rights reserved. No usage without permission.

Cadets from the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, line up before their COVID-19 tests on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Cadets from the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, line up before their COVID-19 tests on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

Cadets from the Alpha Company, 1st Regiment, line up before their COVID-19 tests on May 24, 2021. The testing is to ensure that incoming Cadets do not have COVID-19 and can continue training in a safe environment during Advanced Camp training. | Photo by Anna Pray, Cadet Summer Training Public Affairs Office

From left to right, Army Pfc. Kelly Buterbaugh, Army Spc. Christiana Adams, and Air Force Capt. Jodie Cantey, medical service members assigned to the Delaware National Guard, talk with motorists at a drive-thru testing site for COVID-19 on the grounds of Central Middle School in Dover, Delaware, June 17, 2020. About 10 soldiers and airmen with the National Guard supported the saliva-based testing of 130 people at the school location. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Capt. Brendan Mackie)

Soldiers prepare to receive patients at a Mobile Testing Team location at the Alabama-Coushatta Native American Reservation. Texas Army National Guard Soldiers comprising a Mobile Testing Team visited the Alabama-Coushatta Native American Reservation in Livingston, Texas, on May 11, 2020, to provide free COVID-19 testing to residents of the reservation. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Erin Castle)

Tech. Sgt. Leslie Hamill, a medical technician with the Delaware Air National Guard’s 166th Medical Group, talks with a motorist during a drive-thru coronavirus testing mission at the Townsend Fire Company, Station 26, in Townsend, Delaware, June 9, 2020. Members of the Delaware National Guard supported the saliva-based testing of 100 people at the fire station location. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Capt. Brendan Mackie)

For-profit testing can stop you from getting false negatives?

At Test Station 1, Kendal-Crosslands Nursing Home, Spc. Evans Watkins (left in PPE) Pfc. Jordan Myers (center in PPE) and Pfc. Michael Bonenberger (right) test a staff member while wearing Personal Protective Equipment. Under direct guidance from the Pennsylvania's Department of Health, and closely monitored by CDC officials, Pennsylvania National Guardsmen with Task Force Iroquois, launched a Point Prevalence Sampling Strike Team in Kendal-Crosslands Communities, Kennet Square, PA. The mission is designed to identify possible risks of exposure to the Covid-19 virus by testing the entire staff and residents for the virus. This is part of a pilot program that will eventually reach out across the state.

Nursing student Paige Barker provides a COVID-19 nasal swab test to pre-surgical patients that arrive in a drive-thru Enloe Prompt Care as impacts of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic continues on Friday, January 29, 2021 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU, Chico)

© All Rights Reserved - Black Diamond Images

 

On Saturday 19th March my son and his partner attended a wedding with a large number of guests, over 100 I believe.

Unfortunately, one, or both, contracted Covid 19. They've been living with us since late 2021 while they prepare to build on their recently purchased nearby acreage property.

This became a major problem for us as we were booked and paid to fly to Lord Howe Island on Saturday 26th March to celebrate a friend's milestone birthday.

My wife and I are both double vaccinated and have had our boosters and we had successfully avoided contracting covid for several days following their infection, however my wife finally succumbed on Wednesday 23rd March 2022.

This, disappointingly, put paid to our plans to travel to Lord Howe Island even though regardless of her catching covid as close contacts we would still have had to isolate for 7 days.

As I had been isolating well and with no symptoms, I held off taking a RAT test until Thursday 24th March. To my surprise it was negative.

I took another test on Friday 25th March, again negative, and then this one, on Saturday evening 26th March, even more surprising, it was again negative.

It has not been an easy time and I now know how easily covid can be spread in families, especially in families living in smaller homes or units. I am fortunate that the design of our home has allowed me to lock myself away at one end of the home although using the common kitchen space comes with inherent risks.

So far so good as the other 3 approach the end of their 7-day isolation periods.

If I continue to test Negative on RAT Tests in the next few days but develop symptoms, I'll take a PCR test in a few days just to be sure.

 

Covid infection remains a risk up till at least 14 days after initial infection so my plan is to batten down the hatches and remain in fortress like isolation until at least 14 days have passed.

It's definitely going to be a challenge as the others are desperate to return to some normality and keeping them away from my spaces will become more difficult.

I would not normally be so concerned about catching Covid as it's probably inevitable given that governments have taken the easy options and opened up schools and the economy prematurely.

However, we are booked and paid for a passage on the Spirit of Tasmania, departing on 8th April from Port Melbourne, and while we have accepted not being able to go to Lord Howe Island at this time, we definitely do not want to have to cancel our trip to Tasmania.

Fortunately, we've been able to transfer our booking of the Lord Howe trip till later in the year and thankfully, lost none of our money.

Only time will tell if I can continue to stay clear of infection and get down to Tasmania. Fingers crossed.

Somewhat surreal scene outside Washington DC Shaw Library with long lines to pick up COVID-19 rapid antigen tests.

 

Security guard announcing that people would not be allowed to wait in line more than once per day. "We'll see you tomorrow" he said.

Staff Sgt. Kursty Campbell (Left) and Pfc. Ryan Whispell (Center) test a staff member at Kendal-Crosslands Nursing Home in Kennett Square, Pa., on May 26, 2020. Under guidance from the Pennsylvania Department of Health, and closely monitored by CDC officials, Pennsylvania National Guard members with Task Force Iroquois, launched a Point Prevalence Sampling Strike Team at Kendal-Crosslands. The mission is designed to identify possible risks of exposure to COVID-19 by testing the entire staff and all residents of the facility. This is part of a series pilot program that will reach out across the state. (Photo by Master Sgt. George Roach)

...another Covid-19 test.

 

I don't think we're strictly required but we are being strongly encouraged to take a Covid test before returning to work tomorrow.

 

This has been supported by test centres offering priority testing for school staff in the mornings over a five day period.

 

I'm not sure how much this will help, though any testing is, I suppose, net positive.

 

I've never known such uncertainty about returning to work - worse even than when we started returning to work last May. Unions are at odds as well, with NEU advising teachers in schools 'open to all' not to go into work, while NASUWT are advising that legally you must go into work.

 

The day will certainly be a busy one, as in the midst of the uncertainty schools around the country are having to decide how they are going to implement mass testing, and make it work.

 

For what it's worth, my test was at Anfield again, and it was negative. Let's hope it all stays that way.

Nursing student Elisabeth Simeone provides a COVID-19 nasal swab test to pre-surgical patients that arrive in a drive-thru Enloe Prompt Care as impacts of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic continues on Friday, January 29, 2021 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU, Chico)

Arizona Department of Transportation; AZDOT; ADOT

Georgia Army National Guard Soldiers from the Fort Gordon-based 1148th Transportation Company provide support to a Fulton County COVID-19 testing site warehouse in Alpharetta, Ga. on June 24, 2020. Georgia Guardsmen assist in the warehouse by loading and organizing the personal protective equipment (PPE) to be distributed to various locations throughout Fulton County. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Spc. Tori Miller)

Happy Birthday to me, what a nice present... a Covid test, lucky me...

Special thanks to the testers for permission to shoot this series and put up with occasional accidental beeps when my camera hit the car horn as the swab poked my brain 😷

Hypodermic needle drug use on the streets of Hudson Yards Midtown New York City USA June 22nd 2020

  

Coronavirus COVID-19 SARS-CoV-2 Civil Disobedience Hudson Yards New York City Summer 2020

 

Public - drug abuse - violence - looting - crime - dangerous used drug needles left on the streets on Midtown New York City

 

Closest address

 

The Lewis Rentals

411 W 35th St,

New York, NY 10001

( built in 2018 )

 

West Midtown Medical Group

Opioid Treatment Program

311 West 35th Street,

New York, NY 10001

 

Dyer Avenue at West 35th Street between 8th and 10th avenue

 

Photos May 2nd 2020 to July 15th 2020

  

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PPE

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Covid Testing

@ny1

 

So the dance of Covid begins...

 

Theme: Weight For Me

Year Sixteen Of My 365 Project

This was taken on an overcast Saturday morning and as I walked past no-one was seen entering or leaving the centre.

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.

© rogerperriss@aol.com All rights reserved

Image Taken at Gallagher-Iba Arena, Oklahoma State University, Monday, June 29, 2020, Stillwater, OK. Courtney Bay/OSU Athletics

U.S. Army Spc. Christina Adams, a patient administration specialist with the Delaware National Guard, wears personal protective equipment at a drive-thru testing site for COVID-19 on the grounds of Long Neck Elementary School in Millsboro, Delaware, June 16, 2020. About 10 soldiers and airmen with the Delaware National Guard supported the saliva-based testing of 115 people at the school location. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Capt. Brendan Mackie)

Senior Airman Raelyn Blevins, an aerospace medical technician with the Delaware Air National Guard’s 142nd Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron, wears personal protective equipment at a drive-thru testing site for COVID-19 on the grounds of Long Neck Elementary School in Millsboro, Delaware, June 16, 2020. About 10 soldiers and airmen with the Delaware National Guard supported the saliva-based testing of 115 people at the school location. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Capt. Brendan Mackie)

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