Updates
Featured resources
Find a COVID-19 vaccine near you
Find a free COVID-19 test near you
Vaccine and masking requirements for healthcare workers (July 31, 2024)
Managing respiratory illnesses in schools and early childhood settings (April 23, 2024)
Living with Long COVID
For more information, visit frequently asked questions and guidance documents.
If you are sick, you should stay home
Follow the latest CDC guidance for what to do if you have symptoms of a respiratory virus (COVID-19, flu, or Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) or have tested positive for a respiratory virus.
If you are sick, you should stay home. You can return to normal activities when, for at least 24 hours:
- Your symptoms are getting better overall AND
- You are fever-free without fever-reducing medicine.
When you go back to your normal activities, take added precautions over the next 5 days, such as taking additional steps for cleaner air, hygiene, masks, physical distancing, and/or testing when you will be around other people indoors.
If you are exposed to someone with a respiratory virus, monitor your symptoms and take added precautions for 1-2 weeks (see above). In case you did get the virus, this will help reduce the risk of getting anyone else sick.
Data tracking
- Testing data
- OpenDataPhilly (cumulative cases, tests, vaccinations, hospitalizations, and deaths)
Press releases, blog posts, and live streams
Visit our archive of press releases, blog posts, and live streams on YouTube and Facebook.