COVID-19 Therapeutic Treatments
Treatment for COVID-19 can help prevent hospitalization and reduce your chance for severe disease. Call your doctor right away to learn about your treatment options.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorized emergency use of two oral antiviral therapeutics and has approved the use of one monoclonal antibody therapeutic for the treatment of patients with COVID-19. These treatments have been shown to reduce hospitalization and deaths in high risk COVID-19 patients with mild to moderate symptoms.
This webpage is updated with the latest therapeutic information on a regular basis.
Page Content
- Oral Antiviral Treatment
- Infusion Antiviral Treatment
- COVID-19 Test to Treat
- How to Protect Yourself and Others
- Information for Patients
- Contact Information
Healthcare Providers can access additional information here:
Oral Antiviral Treatments
Paxlovid is authorized for treatment of mild to moderate COVID-19 in adults and pediatric patients age 12 years and older with a positive SARS-CoV-2 test. Renal Paxlovid is a different dosing regimen of Paxlovid that is used for patients who have moderately impaired renal function.
LAGEVRIO
Molnipiravir (LAGEVRIO) is for treating adults age 18 years and older, who are at high risk for progressing to severe COVID-19 and for whom alternative COVID-19 treatment options are not accessible or clinically appropriate.
REMDESIVIR (Veklury)
Veklury (remdesivir) is an antiviral drug for the treatment of adults and pediatric patients with a positive SARS-CoV-2 test who are at high risk for progression to severe COVID-19, including hospitalization or death.
Veklury is administered as an IV infusion over the course of 3 days and should be initiated within 7 days of symptom onset.
- Link to ASPR webpage on Veklury Veklury (remdesivir) | HHS/ASPR
Test to Treat is a new nationwide initiative where people will be able to get tested and – if they are positive access treatments all in one location. These “One-Stop Test to Treat” locations will be available at hundreds of locations nationwide, follow the link below. People can also be tested and treated by their own health care providers who can appropriately prescribe oral antivirals.
How to Protect Yourself and Others
There are steps you can take to protect yourself, your household, and your community from severe illness from COVID-19. These include staying up to date on vaccination, getting tested for COVID-19 if you are symptomatic, and seeking treatment if you test positive.
CDC recommends individuals put together a COVID-19 plan so you have all the information you need on hand if you get sick with COVID-19. Here is a link to the CDC COVID-19 Plan that can be downloaded, printed, and shared with your family, friends, and healthcare provider.
LINK TO How to Protect Yourself and Others | CDC
LINK to COVID-19 PLAN: COVID-19 Personal Plan (cdc.gov)
Connecticut Therapeutic News Spots
- How Test to Treat Sites Work (NBC Connecticut)
- Connecticut's public health commissioner reminds doctors about anti-coronavirus medicines (Connecticut Public Radio)
Information for Patients
Center for Disease Control and Prevent
Department of Health and Human Services
Contact Information
- HHS COVID-19 Therapeutics, COVID19Therapeutics@hhs.gov
- CT DPH COVID-19 Therapeutics, COVIDmeds.DPH@ct.gov