When participants were asked if they live in a country in which COVID-19 testing is/has been widely available, 57.4% responded, “yes,” 27.4% responded, “no,” and the remaining 15.2% responded, “I’m not certain.” Only 5.8% of participants had ordered COVID-19 testing for one or more of their outpatients with SCI/D. Among this group, 22% reported that they had not used formal screening guidelines, 9.8% that they had screened “all outpatients,” and 65.9% that they had used guidelines published by their government. Only 4.4% of respondents reported that they had had a patient with SCI/D diagnosed with COVID-19 (70.3% had not and 25.3% were not certain). The most commonly listed presenting symptoms were fever (86.2%), shortness of breath (62.1%), body aches/worsening pain (20.7%), sweats (20.7%), and chest pain (13.8%). However, 10.3% reported their patients with SCI/D and COVID-19 had had increased spasticity, 6.9% that they had had rigors, and 6.9% that they had been asymptomatic. When asked which treatments their patients with SCI/D and COVID had been offered, 82.8% replied, “strict isolation/quarantine,” 58.6% “emergency room level care/hospitalization,” 20.7% “over the counter medications for symptom relief,” and 27.6% “hydroxychloroquine and/or azithromycin.” Two respondents reported that they had referred their patients to a centralized COVID-19 hospital.