Kentuckians can search for loose COVID-19 testing sites closer to them thanks to a national news last week.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention filed Jan. 24 with the goal of “focusing on peak communities likely to be impacted by the pandemic, other people who don’t have health insurance, and forcing surge testing in state and local jurisdictions. “”
Visit the COVID-19 testing site in https://testinglocator. cdc. gov/Search and search through zip code. You can also determine how far from home you are willing to perform the loose test.
The statewide positive COVID-19 verification rate as of Jan. 23 was 10. 27 percent. This number doesn’t come with in-home verification, which means it’s probably higher.
Every Friday, the state updates its COVID-19 network levels. The last maximum update showed less red, representing the maximum levels of severe infection, on this map.
“We went up and down a bit. . . month to month, but nothing like what I experienced before,” Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday.
Data from the Health and Family Services Cabinet shows that the number of other people hospitalized, in intensive care sets and on ventilators with COVID-19 has decreased over the past two weeks.
In the week ending Jan. 23, another 318 people were hospitalized, 55 in intensive care and 27 on ventilators. That’s down from the 406 hospitalized the week of Jan. 16, adding 63 in intensive care and 31 on ventilators.
Still: “I have to beg people,” Beshear said. “Please take the new reinforcement. It’s safe and effective. “
The U. S. Food and Drug Administrationsays vaccines “can help against serious illness, hospitalization, and death from COVID-19. “
As of Jan. 23, about 39 percent of Kentucky’s general population had done so. The Kentucky Lantern previously reported that many Kentuckians have ended the global pandemic as far as their private lives are concerned.
TRUSTED SUPPORT NEWS.
by Sarah Ladd, Kentucky Lantern January 27, 2023
Kentuckians can search for loose COVID-19 testing sites closer to them thanks to a national news last week.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention filed Jan. 24 with the goal of “focusing on peak communities likely to be impacted by the pandemic, other people who don’t have health insurance, and forcing surge testing in state and local jurisdictions. “”
Visit the COVID-19 testing site in https://testinglocator. cdc. gov/Search and search through zip code. You can also determine how far from home you are willing to perform the loose test.
The statewide positive COVID-19 verification rate as of Jan. 23 10. 27%. This number doesn’t come with home verification, which means it’s probably higher.
Every Friday, the state updates its COVID-19 network levels. The last maximum update showed less red, representing the maximum levels of severe infection, on this map.
“We went up and down a bit. . . month to month, but nothing like what I experienced before,” Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday.
Data from the Health and Family Services Cabinet shows that the number of other people hospitalized, in intensive care sets and on ventilators with COVID-19 has decreased over the past two weeks.
In the week ending Jan. 23, another 318 people were hospitalized, 55 in intensive care and 27 on ventilators. That’s down from the 406 hospitalized the week of Jan. 16, adding 63 in intensive care and 31 on ventilators.
Still: “I have to beg people,” Beshear said. “Please take the new reinforcement. It’s safe and effective. “
The U. S. Food and Drug Administrationsays vaccines “can help against serious illness, hospitalization, and death from COVID-19. “
As of Jan. 23, about 39 percent of Kentucky’s general population had done so. The Kentucky Lantern previously reported that many Kentuckians have ended the global pandemic as far as their private lives are concerned.
TRUSTED SUPPORT NEWS.
Kentucky Lantern belongs to States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported through grants and a donor coalition as a 501c public charity(3). Kentucky Lantern maintains its editorial independence. Please contact editor Jamie Lucke if you have any questions: info@kentuckylantern. com. Follow Kentucky Lantern on Facebook and Twitter.
Sarah Ladd is a journalist based in Louisville, Kentucky. He covered everything from crime to higher education. In 2020, she began reporting on the COVID-19 pandemic and has been covering fitness topics ever since.
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