Skip to content
Advertisement

Ashley Gannon, left, reads a book as she and others wait in line outside a New York City Health + Hospitals COVID testing site in the Brooklyn borough of New York, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020. Gannon says she gets tested periodically to make sure she is coronavirus-free. Some said they waited more than two hours to get a rapid test, one of two kinds of tests available at this particular site. Workers at the site said rapid test results take one to two days, while a regular test could take two to four days. At this testing site, there were longer lines for the rapid test as they are not available at all sites. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
Photo by: Kathy Willens
Ashley Gannon, left, reads a book as she and others wait in line outside a New York City Health + Hospitals COVID testing site in the Brooklyn borough of New York, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020. Gannon says she gets tested periodically to make sure she is coronavirus-free. Some said they waited more than two hours to get a rapid test, one of two kinds of tests available at this particular site. Workers at the site said rapid test results take one to two days, while a regular test could take two to four days. At this testing site, there were longer lines for the rapid test as they are not available at all sites. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

Featured Photo Galleries