Coronavirus testing sites growing across Arkansas

Nurses Mandy Stuckey (left) and Tonya Green conduct a coronavirus screening in April at a drive-thru site at New Life Church in North Little Rock. The site, and one at Ouachita Baptist Universityin Arkadelphia, is a partnership between two Arkansas companies. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe)
Nurses Mandy Stuckey (left) and Tonya Green conduct a coronavirus screening in April at a drive-thru site at New Life Church in North Little Rock. The site, and one at Ouachita Baptist Universityin Arkadelphia, is a partnership between two Arkansas companies. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe)

Two Arkansas companies that began offering drive-thru testing for the coronavirus expanded the number of locations to six by Thursday.

The companies are Sniffle Health, which offers online checkups, and Little Rock's Natural State Laboratories. Tests began Tuesday at New Life Church at 8000 Crystal Hill Road in North Little Rock and Wednesday at Ouachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia. Four other sites around the state were listed at ar-covid19.com, which also said more locations would be added.

Patients who don't have doctor's referrals are screened by a provider on-site or through telemedicine by an Arkansas physician or nurse practitioner. When appropriate, personnel on-site collect a sample from the patient that is then sent to a laboratory for testing. People are asked to provide their identification and insurance cards but won't be charged out of pocket for the test.

Other screening and testing locations have opened around the state.

[CORONAVIRUS: Click here for our complete coverage » arkansasonline.com/coronavirus]

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences is offering free online screenings on its website, uamshealth.com/healthnow, and over the phone at (800) 632-4502.

UAMS Medical Center also is offering drive-thru screenings on the ground floor of a parking garage at Shuffield and Jack Stephens drives in Little Rock.

According to its website (baptist-health.com/coronavirus/), Baptist Health's screening locations include:

• Triage stations in the Medical Towers II parking deck at Baptist Health Medical Center in Little Rock and in front of the emergency room at Baptist Health-Conway. Patients at both locations are billed for an emergency room visit.

• Drive-thru clinics at Baptist Health Medical Center-Heber Springs, Baptist Health Family Clinic-Caddo Valley in Arkadelphia, the Hot Spring County Health Unit in Malvern and the Baptist Health Stuttgart Medical Clinic. People should call ahead to schedule appointments: (501) 887-3279 for the Heber Springs location, (870) 245-2198 for Arkadelphia and (870) 673-7211 for Stuttgart.

Drive-thru screenings are also available at:

• Conway Regional Medical Center (conwayregional.org/patients-visitors/covid-19-info).

• Jefferson Regional Medical Center in Pine Bluff (jrmc.org/covid19/).

• Washington Regional Eureka Springs Family Clinic (wregional.com/main/coronavirus).

Washington Regional Medical Center also has a screening clinic at 3318 N. Hills Blvd. in Fayetteville.

Arkansas' 12 community health centers also are offering screenings and testing at 69 locations around the state. Information on where to go is available from their hot line at (833) 508-0774 or at chc-ar.org/coronavirus-testing-sites.

For children, Arkansas Children's hospital is offering drive-thru screenings and phone screenings at (800) 743-3616. (archildrens.org).

Symptoms of covid-19 include fever, cough and shortness of breath. A health care provider will decide if a test is appropriate based on the symptoms and possible exposure to the coronavirus.

Health officials recommend that people who think they have covid-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, call their health care providers as their first step in seeking health care.

A Section on 04/03/2020

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