Health & Fitness
Free Antiviral Drug Offered For Those With COVID At Bayside Test Site
As Bayside COVID cases rise, locals who test positive for the virus at a pop-up site this week can immediately get free antiviral treatment.

BAYSIDE, QUEENS — As the city battles its latest wave of COVID-19 infections, neighbors in Bayside can now get tested and treated for the virus free of charge while visiting a local park.
A pop-up mobile testing site run by NYC Health and Hospitals is offering PCR and rapid antigen testing at Alley Pond Park from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily between Monday July 25 and next Sunday.
Neighbors who test positive for the virus at the site will be able to immediately receive antiviral medicine as part of the city's first-of-its-kind, treatment-focused COVID-19 efforts. The antiviral prescription will be provided by the person who did the test, and be available for pick up free of charge at a local pharmacy or through a delivery service.
Find out what's happening in Bayside-Douglastonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
As of Monday, New York City's test positivity rate is just over 14 percent with over 4,000 people testing positive per-day — the worst spike in the area since January's Omicron peak, fueled this time by the highly contagious BA.5 variant.
The positivity rate is higher across Bayside's 11360, 11361 and 11364 ZIP codes, where cases during the week of July 16 hit about 18 percent on average.
Find out what's happening in Bayside-Douglastonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Experts, though, assume the true number of infections is as much as 10 times higher, with many at-home tests going unreported, The New York Times reported.
Amid this sixth wave, Mayor Eric Adams cut back on brick-and-mortar PCR and rapid testing sites and scrapped the city's color-coded COVID alert system — choices he's defended amid criticism.
"We're not going to hold onto something that's an old weapon merely because we had it," he said earlier this month, defending the choice to eliminate the COVID alert system.
Instead, the administration has shifted its focus to COVID-19 treatment options — offering access to antiviral medicine at some mobile testing sites and launching a new 24-hour treatment hotline.
It's also prioritized the distribution of at-home COVID tests — which were offered at another Bayside park and pool as of earlier this month.
"It's clear that New Yorkers prefer the reliability, the convenience, and the immediate results provided by at-home tests," Adams said a couple weeks ago after announcing the expansion of a citywide at-home testing kit distribution program.
Many New Yorkers, though, have shrugged off the new COVID wave altogether, reacting mostly with indifference to the rising case count, outlets including The New York Times reported.
While the virus is no longer taking center stage for many, new health concerns are still on the horizon: Over the weekend the World Health Organization declared monkeypox a global emergency, and Rockland County is now contending with a polio outbreak.
For more information about the COVID-19 testing and treatment site at Alley Pond Park, which will set up at 73-06 Springfield Boulevard, check out the NYC Health and Hospitals website here.
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