Get him, newbie.

The reality is that insurance companies may only have one "preferred" retailer at which you can receive free test kits with no out of pocket costs. Or, they may have none.
For example, United Healthcare, the largest insurance company in the US, only reimburses tests upfront at Walmart Pharmacies. If you don't live near a Walmart Pharmacy, or decide to shop somewhere else, you have to pay for the test kit upfront, save your receipt, and submit it for reimbursement. The maximum allowed reimbursement is $12 per test ($24 for a 2-pack).
But at two Walmart Pharmacies in California, the pharmacists weren't aware that a reimbursement program for United-insured customers existed. One of the pharmacists said the store's COVID-19 rapid tests had been sold out for weeks. The other store hadn't received any rapid test shipments in days.
4, per household. Fantastic.If you don't live near a "preferred" pharmacy and don't want to pay out of pocket for a test kit, there is a federal website coming online next Wednesday, COVIDtest.gov, which will send people free test kits through the mail.
Households will be able to order up to 4 COVID-19 tests kits each, but beware they may take 1-2 weeks to be delivered, so it's best to order ahead.
Aaron Ford’s testing odyssey began last Thursday when his girlfriend fell ill with what she’s convinced is COVID-19, went to a clinic to get tested, and was told the first appointment was 10 days out.
Ford thought he’d likely been exposed and began searching for his own test while she quarantined in another part of the house. He looked online for rapid tests. Nothing. He drove around Portland to various pharmacies, then out to Gresham. Nothing. He went online again and found a testing appointment – 50 miles north in Longview, Washington, and also 10 days out.
He called the city of Portland, was referred to Multnomah County’s COVID-19 hotline, where he said he was referred to a third-party website that led nowhere. He said the county employee did direct him to a specific testing site but couldn’t guarantee it was open or if there were appointments available. Finally, he started calling politicians.
“What we need is for elected officials to start acting like leaders, even if it’s not a rosy picture, we the public need information,” he said. “Hold a press conference. This is what we can expect in a week, in a month, and these are the best practices for this situation, not just leaving it up to people to guess.”
And so it goes. The highly contagious omicron variant is running rampant nationally and setting infection records in Oregon. The supply chain – from at-home self-tests to staffing at test sites to laboratory capacity to process tests – is failing to keep up with record demand. Schools are struggling to stay open. Heath care workers are struggling to get tested. Public health guidance is confusing, and sometimes conflicting.
And public officials have no satisfying answers.
“The reality is that widespread testing is not available,” said Julie Sullivan-Springhetti, a spokesperson for Multnomah County. “No one has enough tests. The county has no secret stash. The reality is we have no more information than the state does.”
a-okDavid Northfield, a spokesperson for Oregon Association of Hospitals and Health Systems, said most hospitals have reported an insufficient testing supply against surging demand. That’s created limited choices about how to use the tests, with some prioritizing testing for symptomatic caregivers and patients.
“The lack of testing supply is a challenge, and any infusion of new testing kits would be a big help,” he said in a statement.
What do my hands in my pockets signify?SuperJail Warden wrote:
While everyone was struggling to get test, Ken was running up his test loyalty card. He would go to the test site, stay in his car, and have them stick the thing in his nose. Below the window and out of sight, both of his hands were in his pockets.
That's funny.The Florida Department of Health Medical Director that oversees areas of Orange County including Orlando has been put on leave for encouraging his own staff to get vaccinated.
Orange County Medical Director Dr. Raul Pino wrote an email to staff on Jan. 4th encouraging them to get vaccinated and boosted for COVID-19.
In it he wrote, “I have a hard time understanding how we can be in public health and not practice it.”
After sending the email he was placed on administrative leave.
In an email to WMFE, the Florida Department of Health has confirmed Pino was put on leave because, “the decision to get vaccinated is a personal choice that should be free from coercion and mandates from employers.”
Florida DOH says it’s even conducting an inquiry into whether any laws were broken by sending the email.
Republican Governor Ron DeSantis has banned vaccine mandates in the workplace, and the state has seen a surge in Omicron cases.
It is all the old people in that city for the old people. The Villages? I heard a lot of stories from young people who live or lived in the area. The old people down there treat the place like their sanctum. They will tell young people they shouldn't be there. Why would anyone want to be around only the old? It's like a guy who wants to just "hang with the boys" Weirdos.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
The American taxpayer sends over $2k per year per Florida resident. That is net any money they add to the federal coffers. Ron DeSantis runs a welfare state.