The VACT Mental Health Service Line is the largest multidisciplinary service that provides veterans in the state of Connecticut with the full range of mental health services. We offer a range of information and recommendations to Combat Veterans, including counselling, support services and access to the Veterans Crisis Line, followed by consultation with the Veterans Crisis Line. The PRIME Center supports education for veterans and hospital staff, conducts research to promote improved pain management, provides training in facilities and in our community, and provides support to doctors, veterans and family members.
We offer veterans a range of mental and physical illnesses related to the experience of military and sexual trauma, including PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety and substance abuse.
Comprehensive urological care, including urology, urological surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, breast and prostate cancer, and endocrinology and reproductive health.
The scope of care services includes both West Haven and Newington universities, and the VA Connecticut Healthcare System is committed to providing high-quality care to all veterans, including lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender veterans.
If you need to get the COVID-19 test quickly, CVS Health offers free rapid tests at its community health centers in West Haven and Newington. You sign up for the latest information on test sites at 211, and a health care professional will help you identify a location in your test area. The community health center offers a wide range of testing options, including blood pressure, cholesterol, blood sugar, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension and more. You can also find a test page that offers the test if you have insurance.
The Rapid Test Centre does not test people who have not had an appointment or do not meet the test criteria. If for any other reason, your information will be treated confidentially, but the contact tracer will contact you if any health issues are related to COVID-19. They will also be able to connect you with resources you need when you isolate yourself.

To make an appointment or to register for the rapid test center at West Haven Community Health Center, please call Hartford 311 at (203) 684-5555.
If you do not have a primary supplier, you can choose the nearest test site by telephone. You can find the test by visiting coronavirus.gov, entering your zip code in the "Nearby Places" field, and clicking "GO." Learn what to do while you wait for the results and check the 3 most important steps you need to take while waiting for the covid-19 test result. Come back in a few days to take the PCR test at the West Haven Community Health Center Rapid Test Center.
If you notice any of the symptoms identified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as COVID-19, you must take a test. You can find test sites that offer the test free of charge to those who do not have symptoms of COID-19. If you have insurance and live in a city with a local health authority that recommends that everyone get tested, you should talk to your insurance company and not charge any fees. However, if you develop symptoms of CO VID-21 after the tests, call your doctor and ask if they should be retested.
There are places in community health centers across the state that can run the test and potentially take in new patients for other medical treatments. Drive up or down - in tests is also available in pharmacies - based test sites such as pharmacies, health clinics, hospitals and clinics.

If you are in contact with someone with COVID-19, stay away from home or if you are ill. They call you to check your health and ask who you have close contact with, whether you have been ill or just become ill and, if so, how long you have been out of contact.
The best way to protect yourself and the people you work with from infection is to follow the recommended measures. If you test positive, wear a mask at home, which is 6 meters apart, wash your hands frequently and stay at home if you have symptoms.
If you have symptoms of COVID-19 and believe you have been exposed to someone else, it is very important to stay at home and isolate yourself to avoid transmitting your symptoms to others while you wait for the test results. If you have no symptoms, are not ill and have been unprotected by prolonged close contact, we do not currently have diagnostic tests for nucleic acid (PCR). However, if you have some symptoms, you should stay at home or stay away from others until you receive medical help.
Even if you are tested negative for COVID-19, you can become infected and later test positive. It is also possible that you are tested very early in the infection stage and have already been infected before the positive test or even before the test results, i.e. have also tested negative for CO VID-19.