All of this they posted to Charnas’ Instagram Story.
Her husband, Brandon, then recorded their trip to the Cure Urgent Care facility, where a nurse swabbed the inside of her nose from the passenger seat of their car. The influencer went ahead and took him up on the offer despite officials urging people with low risk factors, including young people and people without underlying health conditions, to instead quarantine and self-isolate to preserve the supply of tests. Jake Deutsch, who works on the Upper West Side, in a post about feeling ill and he offered her a coronavirus test amid a countrywide shortage of tests. “Do you realize the virus stays in the air for hours so you have basically spread the virus in the air all the way from Manhattan to the Hamptons?” one question reads.Ĭharnas, also known as Something Navy, originally came under fire in mid-March when she tagged her friend Dr. And you influence a lot of young people.”Īnother disgruntled follower posted a lengthy list of rhetorical questions skewering the 32-year-old fashionista. “Your privilege does not excuse you from following simple rules to contain yourself. “As a nurse I’m super bummed you couldn’t stay quarantined for the whole 14 days past positive testing,” one user commented on Charnas’ March 27 photo, which shows the mother of two basking in the sunlight with the caption “Fresh air” and a praying hands emoji. To add insult to injury, Arielle Charnas - who previously documented her health journey on Instagram for her 1.3 million followers - is also completely ignoring calls to self-isolate for 14 days, posting pictures on social media showing herself outside and with her family since testing positive on March 18. The New York City fashion influencer who used personal connections to obtain a coronavirus test, much to the disgust of online critics, has now committed another pandemic faux pas - fleeing to the Hamptons with her family after testing positive for COVID-19. New COVID subvariant could make you sweat at nightįew young kids get COVID-19 vaccination in the Big AppleĪrmy cuts pay from over 60,000 unvaccinated National Guard, reserves China has helped spread four epidemics - and COVID’s not the last