Example: marketing

REPORTABLE DISEASES AND CONDITIONS

Please Post Revised 7/6/18. REPORTABLE DISEASES AND CONDITIONS . Title 17, California Code of Regulations (CCR), 2500. It is the duty of every health care provider, knowing of or in attendance on a case or suspected case of any of the DISEASES or CONDITIONS listed below, to report to the local health officer for the jurisdiction where the patient resides. Health care provider encompasses physicians (surgeons, osteopaths, oriental medicine practitioners), veterinarians, podiatrists, physician assistants, registered nurses (nurse practitioners, nurse midwives, school nurses), infection control professionals, medical examiners/coroners, dentists, and chiropractors, as well as any other person with knowledge of a case or suspected case.

Please Post Revised 9/5/18. REPORTABLE DISEASES AND CONDITIONS Title 17, California Code of Regulations (CCR), § 2500 It is the duty of every health care provider, knowing of or in attendance on a case or suspected case of any of the diseases or conditions listed below, to

Information

Domain:

Source:

Link to this page:

Please notify us if you found a problem with this document:

Other abuse

Transcription of REPORTABLE DISEASES AND CONDITIONS

1 Please Post Revised 7/6/18. REPORTABLE DISEASES AND CONDITIONS . Title 17, California Code of Regulations (CCR), 2500. It is the duty of every health care provider, knowing of or in attendance on a case or suspected case of any of the DISEASES or CONDITIONS listed below, to report to the local health officer for the jurisdiction where the patient resides. Health care provider encompasses physicians (surgeons, osteopaths, oriental medicine practitioners), veterinarians, podiatrists, physician assistants, registered nurses (nurse practitioners, nurse midwives, school nurses), infection control professionals, medical examiners/coroners, dentists, and chiropractors, as well as any other person with knowledge of a case or suspected case.

2 Note: This list is specific to Los Angeles County and differs from state and federal reporting requirements . Report immediately by telephone (for both confirmed and suspected cases). Report by telephone within 1 working day from identification Report by electronic transmission (including FAX), telephone or mail within 1 working day from identification Report by electronic transmission (including FAX), telephone or mail within 7 calendar days from identification Mandated by and REPORTABLE to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health Report electronically via the National Healthcare Safety Network ( ) if enrolled.

3 If not enrolled, use the LAC DPH. CRE Case Report Form ( ). For TB reporting questions: contact the TB Control Program (213) 745-0800 or visit For HIV/STD reporting questions: contact the Division of HIV and STD Programs. HIV (213) 351-8516, STDs (213) 368-7441. For laboratory reporting: For veterinary reporting: REPORTABLE COMMUNICABLE DISEASES . Amebiasis Giardiasis Rickettsial DISEASES (non-Rocky Mountain Anaplasmosis Gonococcal Infection Spotted Fever), including Typhus and Anthrax, human or animal Haemophilus influenzae, invasive disease Typhus-like Illnesses Babesiosis only, all serotypes, less than 5 years of age Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever Botulism: infant, foodborne, or wound Hantavirus Infection Rubella (German Measles).

4 Brucellosis, animal; except infections due to Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome Rubella Syndrome, Congenital Brucella canis Hepatitis A, acute infection Salmonellosis, other than Typhoid Fever Brucellosis, human Hepatitis B, specify acute or chronic Scabies, atypical or crusted . Campylobacteriosis Hepatitis C, specify acute or chronic Scombroid Fish Poisoning Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae Hepatitis D (Delta), specify acute or chronic Shiga Toxin, detected in feces (CRE), including Klebsiella sp., E. coli, and Hepatitis E, acute infection Shigellosis Enterobacter sp.

5 , in acute care hospitals or Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Smallpox (Variola). skilled nursing facilities infection, stage 3 (AIDS) ( Streptococcal Infection, outbreaks any type Chancroid ) Streptococcal Infection, individual case in a Chickenpox (Varicella), only Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), food handler or dairy worker hospitalizations, deaths, and outbreaks ( 3 acute infection ( ) Streptococcal Infection, Invasive Group A, cases, or one case in a high-risk setting) Influenza deaths, laboratory confirmed including Streptococcal Toxic Shock Chikungunya Virus Infection cases only, all ages Syndrome and Necrotizing Fasciitis; do not Chlamydia trachomatis infection, including Influenza, novel strains, human report individual cases of pharyngitis or lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV) Legionellosis scarlet fever.

6 Cholera Leprosy (Hansen's Disease) Streptococcus pneumoniae, invasive . Ciguatera Fish Poisoning Leptospirosis Syphilis . Coccidioidomycosis Listeriosis Tetanus Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD) and other Lyme Disease Trichinosis Transmissible Spongiform Malaria Tuberculosis . Encephalopathies (TSE) Measles (Rubeola) Tularemia, animal Cryptosporidiosis Meningitis, specify etiology: viral, bacterial, Tularemia, human Cyclosporiasis fungal, or parasitic Typhoid Fever, cases and carriers Cysticercosis or Taeniasis Meningococcal Infection Vibrio Infection Dengue Virus Infection Mumps Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers, human or animal Diphtheria Myelitis, acute flaccid ( , Crimean-Congo, Ebola, Lassa and Domoic Acid (Amnesic Shellfish) Poisoning Novel virus infection with pandemic Marburg viruses).

7 Ehrlichiosis potential West Nile Virus (WNV) Infection Encephalitis, specify etiology: viral, Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning Yellow Fever bacterial, fungal or parasitic Pertussis (Whooping Cough) Yersiniosis Escherichia coli, shiga toxin producing Plague, human or animal Zika Virus Infection (STEC) including E. coli O157 Poliovirus Infection Flavivirus infection of undetermined species Psittacosis OCCURRENCE OF ANY. Foodborne Disease Q Fever UNUSUAL DISEASE. Foodborne Outbreak; 2 or more suspected Rabies, human or animal OUTBREAKS OF ANY DISEASE, including cases from separate households with same Relapsing Fever DISEASES not listed above.

8 Specify if assumed source Respiratory Syncytial Virus, deaths and occurring in an institution and/or the open less than 5 years only community. REPORTABLE NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASES OR CONDITIONS . Alzheimer's Disease and Related CONDITIONS Disorders Characterized by Lapses of Pesticide-Related Illnesses (Health and (CCR 2802, 2806, 2810) Consciousness (CCR 2806, 2810) Safety Code 105200). To report a case or outbreak of any disease, contact the Communicable Disease Reporting System Tel: (888) 397-3993 Fax: (888) 397-3778 or (213) 482-5508.

9 Health Professionals Reporting Webpage.


Related search queries