Proposed Text
Part I
Definitions
12VAC5-90-10. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Affected area" means any part or the whole of the Commonwealth, which has been identified as where persons reside, or may be located, who are known to have been exposed to or infected with, or who are reasonably suspected to have been exposed to or infected with, a communicable disease of public health threat. "Affected area" shall include, but not be limited to, cities, counties, towns, and subsections of such areas, public and private property, buildings, and other structures.
"Arboviral infection" means a viral illness that is transmitted by a mosquito, tick, or other arthropod. This includes, but is not limited to, chikungunya (CHIK), dengue, eastern equine encephalitis (EEE), LaCrosse encephalitis (LAC), also known as California encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis (SLE), West Nile virus (WNV), and Zika virus (Zika) infection.
"Board" means the State Board of Health.
"Cancer" means all carcinomas, sarcomas, melanomas, leukemias, and lymphomas excluding localized basal and squamous cell carcinomas of the skin, except for lesions of the mucous membranes.
"CDC" means the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
"Child care center" means a child day center, child day program, family day home, family day system, or registered family day home as defined by § 63.2-100 of the Code of Virginia, or a similar place providing day care of children by such other name as may be applied.
"Clinic" means any facility, freestanding or associated with a hospital, that provides preventive, diagnostic, therapeutic, rehabilitative, or palliative care or services to outpatients.
"Commissioner" means the State Health Commissioner or his duly designated officer or agent, unless stated in a provision of this chapter that it applies to the State Health Commissioner in his sole discretion.
"Communicable disease" means an illness due to an infectious agent or its toxic products which is transmitted, directly or indirectly, to a susceptible host from an infected person, animal, or arthropod or through the agency of an intermediate host or a vector or through the inanimate environment.
"Communicable disease of public health significance" means an illness caused by a specific or suspected infectious agent that may be transmitted directly or indirectly from one individual to another. This includes but is not limited to infections caused by human immunodeficiency viruses, bloodborne pathogens, and tubercle bacillus. The State Health Commissioner may determine that diseases caused by other pathogens constitute communicable diseases of public health significance.
"Communicable disease of public health threat" means an illness of public health significance, as determined by the State Health Commissioner in accordance with this chapter, caused by a specific or suspected infectious agent that may be reasonably expected or is known to be readily transmitted directly or indirectly from one individual to another and has been found to create a risk of death or significant injury or impairment; this definition shall not, however, be construed to include human immunodeficiency viruses or the tubercle bacilli, unless used as a bioterrorism weapon.
"Companion animal" means, consistent with the provisions of § 3.2-6500 of the Code of Virginia, any domestic or feral dog, domestic or feral cat, nonhuman primate, guinea pig, hamster, rabbit not raised for human food or fiber, exotic or native animal, reptile, exotic or native bird, or any feral animal or any animal under the care, custody, or ownership of a person or any animal that is bought, sold, traded, or bartered by any person. Agricultural animals, game species, or any animals regulated under federal law as research animals shall not be considered companion animals for the purpose of this chapter.
"Condition" means any adverse health event, such as a disease, an infection, a syndrome, or as indicated by a procedure (including but not limited to the results of a physical exam, laboratory test, or imaging interpretation) suggesting that an exposure of public health importance has occurred.
"Contact" means a person or animal known to have been in such association with an infected person or animal as to have had an opportunity of acquiring the infection.
"Contact services" means a broad array of services that are offered to persons with infectious diseases and their contacts. Contact services include contact tracing, providing information about current infections, developing risk reduction plans to reduce the chances of future infections, and connecting to appropriate medical care and other services.
"Contact tracing" means the process by which an infected person or health department employee notifies others that they may have been exposed to the infected person in a manner known to transmit the infectious agent in question.
"Coronavirus infection, severe" means suspected or confirmed infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-associated coronavirus (SARS-CoV), Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS)-associated coronavirus (MERS-CoV), or another coronavirus causing a severe acute illness.
"Decontamination" means the use of physical or chemical means to remove, inactivate, or destroy hazardous substances or organisms from a person, surface, or item to the point that such substances or organisms are no longer capable of causing adverse health effects and the surface or item is rendered safe for handling, use, or disposal.
"Department" means the State Department of Health, also referred to as the Virginia Department of Health (VDH).
"Designee" or "designated officer or agent" means any person, or group of persons, designated by the State Health Commissioner, to act on behalf of the commissioner or the board.
"Ehrlichiosis/Anaplasmosis" means human infections caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis (formerly included in the category "human monocytic ehrlichiosis" or "HME"), Ehrlichia ewingii or Anaplasma phagocytophilum (formerly included in the category "human granulocytic ehrlichiosis" or "HGE").
"Epidemic" means the occurrence in a community or region of cases of an illness clearly in excess of normal expectancy.
"Essential needs" means basic human needs for sustenance including but not limited to food, water, clothing, and health care (e.g., medications, therapies, testing, and durable medical equipment).
"Exceptional circumstances" means the presence, as determined by the commissioner in his sole discretion, of one or more factors that may affect the ability of the department to effectively control a communicable disease of public health threat. Factors to be considered include but are not limited to: (i) characteristics or suspected characteristics of the disease-causing organism or suspected disease-causing organism such as virulence, routes of transmission, minimum infectious dose, rapidity of disease spread, the potential for extensive disease spread, and the existence and availability of demonstrated effective treatment; (ii) known or suspected risk factors for infection; (iii) the potential magnitude of the effect of the disease on the health and welfare of the public; and (iv) the extent of voluntary compliance with public health recommendations. The determination of exceptional circumstances by the commissioner may take into account the experience or results of investigation in Virginia, another state, or another country.
"Foodborne outbreak" means two or more cases of a similar illness acquired through the consumption of food contaminated with chemicals or an infectious agent or its toxic products. Such illnesses include but are not limited to heavy metal intoxication, staphylococcal food poisoning, botulism, salmonellosis, shigellosis, Clostridium perfringens food poisoning, hepatitis A, and Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli infection.
"Healthcare-associated infection" (also known as nosocomial
infection) means a localized or systemic condition resulting from an adverse
reaction to the presence of an infectious agent or agents or its toxin or
toxins that (i) occurs in a patient in a health care setting (e.g., a hospitalmedical
care facility or outpatient clinic), and (ii) was not found to be
present or incubating at the time of admission unless the infection was related
to a previous admission to the same setting, and (iii) if the setting is a
hospital, meets the criteria for a specific infection site as defined by CDC.
.
"Hepatitis C, acute" means the following clinical
characteristics are met: (i) discrete onset of symptoms indicative of viral
hepatitis and (ii) jaundice or elevated serum aminotransferase levels and the
following laboratory criteria are met: (a) serum alanine aminotransferase
levels (ALT) greater than 200 IU/L; (b) IgM anti-HAV negative (if done); (c)
IgM anti-HBc negative (if done); and (d) hepatitis C virus antibody (anti-HCV)
positive, HCV antigen positive, or HCV RNA positive by nucleic acid test.
"Hepatitis C, chronic" means that the laboratory
criteria specified in clauses (b), (c) and (d) listed above for an acute case
are met but clinical signs or symptoms of acute viral hepatitis are not present
and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels do not exceed 200 IU/L. This
category will include cases that may be acutely infected but not symptomatic.
"Immunization" means a procedure that increases the protective response of an individual's immune system to specified pathogens.
"Independent pathology laboratory" means a nonhospital or a hospital laboratory performing surgical pathology, including fine needle aspiration biopsy and bone marrow specimen examination services, which reports the results of such tests directly to physician offices, without reporting to a hospital or accessioning the information into a hospital tumor registry.
"Individual" means a person or companion animal. When the context requires it, "person or persons" shall be deemed to include any individual.
"Infection" means the entry and multiplication or persistence of a disease-causing organism (prion, virus, bacteria, fungus, parasite, or ectoparasite) in the body of an individual. An infection may be inapparent (i.e., without recognizable signs or symptoms but identifiable by laboratory means) or manifest (clinically apparent).
"Influenza A, novel virus" means infection of a human with an influenza A virus subtype that is different from currently circulating human influenza H1 and H3 viruses. Novel subtypes include H2, H5, H7, and H9 subtypes or influenza H1 and H3 subtypes originating from a nonhuman species or from genetic reassortment of human and animal influenza viruses.
"Invasive" means the organism is affecting a normally sterile site, including but not limited to blood or cerebrospinal fluid.
"Investigation" means an inquiry into the incidence, prevalence, extent, source, mode of transmission, causation of, and other information pertinent to a disease occurrence.
"Isolation" means the physical separation, including confinement or restriction of movement, of an individual or individuals who are infected with, or are reasonably suspected to be infected with, a communicable disease in order to prevent or limit the transmission of the communicable disease to uninfected and unexposed individuals.
"Isolation, complete" means the full-time confinement or restriction of movement of an individual or individuals infected with, or reasonably suspected to be infected with, a communicable disease in order to prevent or limit the transmission of the communicable disease to uninfected and unexposed individuals.
"Isolation, modified" means a selective, partial limitation of freedom of movement or actions of an individual or individuals infected with, or reasonably suspected to be infected with, a communicable disease. Modified isolation is designed to meet particular situations and includes but is not limited to the exclusion of children from school, the prohibition or restriction from engaging in a particular occupation or using public or mass transportation, or requirements for the use of devices or procedures intended to limit disease transmission.
"Isolation, protective" means the physical separation of a susceptible individual or individuals not infected with, or not reasonably suspected to be infected with, a communicable disease from an environment where transmission is occurring, or is reasonably suspected to be occurring, in order to prevent the individual or individuals from acquiring the communicable disease.
"Laboratory" means a clinical laboratory that examines materials derived from the human body for the purpose of providing information on the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of disease.
"Laboratory director" means any person in charge of supervising a laboratory conducting business in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
"Law-enforcement agency" means any sheriff's office, police department, adult or youth correctional officer, or other agency or department that employs persons who have law-enforcement authority that is under the direction and control of the Commonwealth or any local governing body. "Law-enforcement agency" shall include, by order of the Governor, the Virginia National Guard.
"Lead, reportable levels" means any detectable blood
lead level in children 15 years of age and younger and levels greater than or
equal to 5 μg/dL in a person older than 15 years of age.
"Least restrictive" means the minimal limitation of the freedom of movement and communication of an individual while under an order of isolation or an order of quarantine that also effectively protects unexposed and susceptible individuals from disease transmission.
"Medical care facility" means any hospital or nursing home licensed in the Commonwealth, or any hospital operated by or contracted to operate by an entity of the United States government or the Commonwealth of Virginia.
"Midwife" means any person who is licensed as a nurse midwife by the Virginia Boards of Nursing and Medicine or who is licensed by the Board of Medicine as a certified professional midwife.
"National Healthcare Safety Network" or "NHSN" means a surveillance system created by the CDC for accumulating, exchanging, and integrating relevant information on infectious adverse events associated with health care delivery.
"Nucleic acid detection" means laboratory testing of a clinical specimen to determine the presence of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) or ribonucleic acid (RNA) specific for an infectious agent using any method, including hybridization, sequencing, or amplification such as polymerase chain reaction.
"Nurse" means any person licensed as a professional nurse or as a licensed practical nurse by the Virginia Board of Nursing.
"Occupational outbreak" means a cluster of illness or disease that is indicative of a work-related exposure. Such conditions include but are not limited to silicosis, asbestosis, byssinosis, pneumoconiosis, and tuberculosis.
"Outbreak" means the occurrence of more cases of a disease than expected.
"Period of communicability" means the time or times during which the etiologic agent may be transferred directly or indirectly from an infected person to another person, or from an infected animal to a person.
"Physician" means any person licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy by the Virginia Board of Medicine.
"Quarantine" means the physical separation, including confinement or restriction of movement, of an individual or individuals who are present within an affected area or who are known to have been exposed, or may reasonably be suspected to have been exposed, to a communicable disease and who do not yet show signs or symptoms of infection with the communicable disease in order to prevent or limit the transmission of the communicable disease of public health threat to unexposed and uninfected individuals.
"Quarantine, complete" means the full-time confinement or restriction of movement of an individual or individuals who do not have signs or symptoms of infection but may have been exposed, or may reasonably be suspected to have been exposed, to a communicable disease of public health threat in order to prevent the transmission of the communicable disease of public health threat to uninfected individuals.
"Quarantine, modified" means a selective, partial limitation of freedom of movement or actions of an individual or individuals who do not have signs or symptoms of the infection but have been exposed to, or are reasonably suspected to have been exposed to, a communicable disease of public health threat. Modified quarantine may be designed to meet particular situations and includes but is not limited to limiting movement to the home, work, or one or more other locations, the prohibition or restriction from using public or mass transportation, or requirements for the use of devices or procedures intended to limit disease transmission.
"Reportable disease" means an illness due to a specific toxic substance, occupational exposure, or infectious agent, which affects a susceptible individual, either directly, as from an infected animal or person, or indirectly through an intermediate host, vector, or the environment, as determined by the board.
"School" means (i) any public school from kindergarten through grade 12 operated under the authority of any locality within the Commonwealth, (ii) any private or religious school that offers instruction at any level or grade from kindergarten through grade 12; and (iii) any private or religious nursery school or preschool, or any private or religious child care center required to be licensed by the Commonwealth.
"Serology" means the testing of blood, serum, or other body fluids for the presence of antibodies or other markers of an infection or disease process.
"Surveillance" means the ongoing systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of outcome-specific data for use in the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice. A surveillance system includes the functional capacity for data analysis as well as the timely dissemination of these data to persons who can undertake effective prevention and control activities.
"Susceptible individual" means a person or animal who is vulnerable to or potentially able to contract a disease or condition. Factors that affect an individual's susceptibility include but are not limited to physical characteristics, genetics, previous or chronic exposures, chronic conditions or infections, immunization history, or use of medications.
"Toxic substance" means any substance, including any raw materials, intermediate products, catalysts, final products, or by-products of any manufacturing operation conducted in a commercial establishment, that has the capacity, through its physical, chemical or biological properties, to pose a substantial risk of death or impairment either immediately or over time, to the normal functions of humans, aquatic organisms, or any other animal but not including any pharmaceutical preparation which deliberately or inadvertently is consumed in such a way as to result in a drug overdose.
"Tubercle bacilli" means disease-causing
organisms belonging to the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and includes
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium bovis, and Mycobacterium africanum or
other members as may be established by the commissioner.
"Tubercle bacilli" means disease-causing organisms belonging to the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and includes Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium africanum, Mycobacterium bovis, Mycobacterium canetti, Mycobacterium microti, Mycobacterium caprae or other members as may be established by the commissioner.
"Tuberculin skin test (TST)" means a test for
demonstrating infection with tubercle bacilli, performed according to the
Mantoux method, in which 0.1 ml of 5 TU strength tuberculin purified protein derivative
(PPD) is injected intradermally on the volar surface of the arm. Any reaction
is observed 48-72 hours after placement and palpable induration is measured
across the diameter transverse to the long axis of the arm. The measurement of
the indurated area is recorded in millimeters and the significance of the
measured induration is based on existing national and department guidelines.
"Tuberculosis" means a disease caused by tubercle
bacilli.
"Tuberculosis, active disease" (also "active tuberculosis disease" and "active TB disease"), as defined by § 32.1-49.1 of the Code of Virginia, means a communicable disease caused by an airborne microorganism and characterized by the presence of either (i) a specimen of sputum or other bodily fluid or tissue that has been found to contain tubercle bacilli as evidenced by culture or nucleic acid amplification, including preliminary identification by rapid methodologies; (ii) a specimen of sputum or other bodily fluid or tissue that is suspected to contain tubercle bacilli as evidenced by smear, and where sufficient clinical and radiographic evidence of active tuberculosis disease is present as determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine in Virginia; or (iii) sufficient clinical and radiographic evidence of active tuberculosis disease as determined by the commissioner is present, but a specimen of sputum or other bodily fluid or tissue containing, or suspected of containing, tubercle bacilli is unobtainable.
"Tuberculosis infection in children age <4 years"
means a significant reaction resulting from a tuberculin skin test (TST) or
other approved test for latent infection withoutpositive result from a
test for tuberculosis infection without clinical or radiographicother
evidence of active tuberculosis disease, in children from birth up to their
fourth birthday.
"Vaccinia, disease or adverse event" means vaccinia infection or serious or unexpected events in persons who received the smallpox vaccine or their contacts, including but not limited to bacterial infections, eczema vaccinatum, erythema multiforme, generalized vaccinia, progressive vaccinia, inadvertent inoculation, post-vaccinial encephalopathy or encephalomyelitis, ocular vaccinia, and fetal vaccinia.
"Waterborne outbreak" means two or more cases of a similar illness acquired through the ingestion of or other exposure to water contaminated with chemicals or an infectious agent or its toxic products. Such illnesses include but are not limited to giardiasis, viral gastroenteritis, cryptosporidiosis, hepatitis A, cholera, and shigellosis. A single case of laboratory-confirmed primary amebic meningoencephalitis or of waterborne chemical poisoning is considered an outbreak.
Part III
Reporting of Disease
12VAC5-90-80. Lists of diseases that shall be reported.
A. Reportable disease list. The board declares suspected or confirmed cases of the following named diseases, toxic effects, and conditions to be reportable by the persons enumerated in 12VAC5-90-90. Conditions identified by an asterisk (*) require immediate communication to the local health department by the most rapid means available upon suspicion or confirmation, as defined in subsection C of this section. Other conditions should be reported within three days of suspected or confirmed diagnosis, unless otherwise specified in this section. Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome shall be reported as specified in subsection E of this section.
Amebiasis (Entamoeba histolytica)
*Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis)
Arboviral infections (e.g., CHIK, dengue, EEE, LAC, SLE, WNV, Zika)
Babesiosis (Babesia spp.)
*Botulism (Clostridium botulinum)
*Brucellosis (Brucella spp.)
Campylobacteriosis (Campylobacter spp.)
Candida auris, infection or colonization
Carbapenemase-producing organism, infection or colonization
Chancroid (Haemophilus ducreyi)
Chickenpox (Varicella virus)
Chlamydia trachomatis infection
*Cholera (Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139)
*Coronavirus infection, severe
Cryptosporidiosis (Cryptosporidium spp.)
Cyclosporiasis (Cyclospora spp.)
*Diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheriae)
*Disease caused by an agent that may have been used as a weapon
Ehrlichiosis/Anaplasmosis (Ehrlichia spp., Anaplasma phagocytophilum)
Giardiasis (Giardia spp.)
Gonorrhea (Neisseria gonorrhoeae)
Granuloma inguinale (Calymmatobacterium granulomatis)
*Haemophilus influenzae infection, invasive
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome
Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)
*Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B (acute and chronic)
Hepatitis C (acute and chronic)
Hepatitis, other acute viral
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection
Influenza, confirmed
*Influenza-associated deaths if younger than 18 years of age
Lead, blood levels
Legionellosis (Legionella spp.)
Leprosy (Hansen's disease) (Mycobacterium leprae)
Leptospirosis (Leptospira interrogans)
Listeriosis (Listeria monocytogenes)
Lyme disease (Borrelia spp.)
Lymphogranuloma venereum (Chlamydia trachomatis)
Malaria (Plasmodium spp.)
*Measles (Rubeola)
*Meningococcal disease (Neisseria meningitidis)
Mumps
Neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS)
Ophthalmia neonatorum
*Outbreaks, all (including foodborne, health care-associated, occupational, toxic substance-related, waterborne, and any other outbreak)
*Pertussis (Bordetella pertussis)
*Plague (Yersinia pestis)
*Poliovirus infection, including poliomyelitis
*Psittacosis (Chlamydophila psittaci)
*Q fever (Coxiella burnetii)
*Rabies, human and animal
Rabies treatment, post-exposure
*Rubella, including congenital rubella syndrome
Salmonellosis (Salmonella spp.)
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli infection
Shigellosis (Shigella spp.)
*Smallpox (Variola virus)
Spotted fever rickettsiosis (Rickettsia spp.)
Streptococcal disease, Group A, invasive or toxic shock
Streptococcus pneumoniae infection, invasive if younger than five years of age
Syphilis (Treponema pallidum) report *congenital, *primary, *secondary, and other
Tetanus (Clostridium tetani)
Toxic substance-related illness
Trichinosis (Trichinellosis) (Trichinella spiralis)
*Tuberculosis, active disease (Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex)
Tuberculosis infection
*Tularemia (Francisella tularensis)
*Typhoid/Paratyphoid infection (Salmonella Typhi, Salmonella Paratyphi)
*Unusual occurrence of disease of public health concern
*Vaccinia, disease or adverse event
Vancomycin-intermediate or vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection
*Vibriosis (Vibrio spp.)
*Viral hemorrhagic fever
*Yellow fever
Yersiniosis (Yersinia spp.)
B. Conditions reportable by directors of laboratories. Laboratories shall report all test results indicative of and specific for the diseases, infections, microorganisms, conditions, and toxic effects specified in this subsection for humans. Such tests include microbiological culture, isolation, or identification; assays for specific antibodies; and identification of specific antigens, toxins, or nucleic acid sequences. Additional condition-specific requirements are noted in this subsection and subsection D of this section. Conditions identified by an asterisk (*) require immediate communication to the local health department by the most rapid means available upon suspicion or confirmation, as defined in subsection C of this section. Other conditions should be reported within three days of suspected or confirmed diagnosis.
Amebiasis (Entamoeba histolytica)
*Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis)
Arboviral infection, for example, CHIK, dengue, EEE, LAC, SLE, WNV, or Zika
Babesiosis (Babesia spp.)
*Botulism (Clostridium botulinum)
*Brucellosis (Brucella spp.)
Campylobacteriosis (Campylobacter spp.)
Candida auris - Include available antimicrobial susceptibility findings in report.
Carbapenemase-producing organism - Include available antimicrobial susceptibility findings in report.
Chancroid (Haemophilus ducreyi)
Chickenpox (Varicella virus)
Chlamydia trachomatis infection
*Cholera (Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139)
*Coronavirus infection, severe (e.g., SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV)
Cryptosporidiosis (Cryptosporidium spp.)
Cyclosporiasis (Cyclospora spp.)
*Diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheriae)
Ehrlichiosis/Anaplasmosis (Ehrlichia spp., Anaplasma phagocytophilum)
Giardiasis (Giardia spp.)
Gonorrhea (Neisseria gonorrhoeae) - Include available antimicrobial susceptibility findings in report.
*Haemophilus influenzae infection, invasive
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome
*Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B (acute and chronic) - For All hepatitis B patients, also report available results of serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and all available results from the hepatitis panel.
Hepatitis C (acute and chronic) - For all patients with any positive HCV test, also report all results of HCV viral load tests, including undetectable viral loads and report available results of serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and all available results from the hepatitis panel.
Hepatitis, other acute viral - Any finding indicative of acute infection with hepatitis D, E, or other cause of viral hepatitis. For any reportable hepatitis finding, submit all available results from the hepatitis panel.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection - For HIV-infected patients, report all results of CD4 and HIV viral load tests, including undetectable viral loads. For HIV-infected patients, report all HIV genetic nucleotide sequence data associated with HIV drug resistance tests by electronic submission. For children younger than three years of age, report all tests regardless of the test findings (e.g., negative or positive).
Influenza, confirmed- By culture, antigen detection by direct fluorescent antibody (DFA), or nucleic acid detection.
Lead, blood levels - All lead results from tests of venous or capillary blood performed by a laboratory certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in accordance with 42 USC § 263a, the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment of 1988 (CLIA-certified).
Legionellosis (Legionella spp.)
Leptospirosis (Leptospira interrogans)
Listeriosis (Listeria monocytogenes), invasive or if associated with miscarriage or stillbirth from placental or fetal tissue
Lyme disease (Borrelia spp.)
Malaria (Plasmodium spp.)
*Measles (Rubeola)
*Meningococcal disease (Neisseria meningitidis), invasive - Include identification of gram-negative diplococci.
Mumps
*Mycobacterial diseases - (See 12VAC5-90-225 B) Report any of the following:
1. Acid fast bacilli;
2. M. tuberculosis complex or any other mycobacteria;
3. Antimicrobial susceptibility results for M. tuberculosis complex.
*Pertussis (Bordetella pertussis)
*Plague (Yersinia pestis)
*Poliovirus infection
*Psittacosis (Chlamydophila psittaci)
*Q fever (Coxiella burnetii)
*Rabies, human and animal
*Rubella
Salmonellosis (Salmonella spp.)
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli infection
Shigellosis (Shigella spp.)
*Smallpox (Variola virus)
Spotted fever rickettsiosis (Rickettsia spp.)
Streptococcal disease, Group A, invasive or toxic shock
Streptococcus pneumoniae infection, invasive if younger than five years of age
*Syphilis (Treponema pallidum)
Toxic substance-related illness - By blood or urine laboratory findings above the normal range, including heavy metals, pesticides, and industrial-type solvents and gases. When applicable and available, report speciation of metals when blood or urine levels are elevated in order to differentiate the chemical species (elemental, organic, or inorganic).
Trichinosis (Trichinellosis) (Trichinella spiralis)
Tuberculosis infection
*Tularemia (Francisella tularensis)
*Typhoid/Paratyphoid infection (Salmonella Typhi, Salmonella Paratyphi A, Salmonella Paratyphi B, Salmonella Paratyphi C)
*Vaccinia, disease or adverse event
Vancomycin-intermediate or vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection - Include available antimicrobial susceptibility findings in report.
*Vibriosis (Vibrio spp., Photobacterium damselae, Grimontia hollisae), other than toxigenic Vibrio cholera O1 or O139, which are reportable as cholera
*Viral hemorrhagic fever
*Yellow fever
Yersiniosis (Yersinia spp.)
C. Reportable diseases requiring rapid communication. Certain of the diseases in the list of reportable diseases because of their extremely contagious nature, potential for greater harm, or availability of a specific intervention that must be administered in a timely manner require immediate identification and control. Reporting of persons confirmed or suspected of having these diseases, listed in this subsection, shall be made immediately by the most rapid means available, preferably by telephone to the local health department. (These same diseases are also identified by an asterisk (*) in subsections A and B, where applicable, of this section.)
Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis)
Botulism (Clostridium botulinum)
Brucellosis (Brucella spp.)
Cholera (Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139)
Coronavirus infection, severe
Diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheriae)
Disease caused by an agent that may have been used as a weapon
Haemophilus influenzae infection, invasive
Hepatitis A
Influenza-associated deaths if younger than 18 years of age
Influenza A, novel virus
Measles (Rubeola virus)
Meningococcal disease (Neisseria meningitidis)
Outbreaks, all
Pertussis (Bordetella pertussis)
Plague (Yersinia pestis)
Poliovirus infection, including poliomyelitis
Psittacosis (Chlamydophila psittaci)
Q fever (Coxiella burnetii)
Rabies, human and animal
Rubella, including congenital rubella syndrome
Smallpox (Variola virus)
Syphilis, congenital, primary, and secondary (Treponema pallidum)
Tuberculosis, active disease (Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex)
Tularemia (Francisella tularensis)
Typhoid/Paratyphoid infection (Salmonella Typhi, Salmonella Paratyphi (all types))
Unusual occurrence of disease of public health concern
Vaccinia, disease or adverse event
Vibriosis (Vibrio spp., Photobacterium damselae, Grimontia hollisae), other than toxigenic Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139, which are reportable as cholera
Viral hemorrhagic fever
Yellow fever
D. Submission of initial isolate or other specimen for further
public health testing. A laboratory identifying evidence of any of the
conditions in this subsection shall notify the local health department of the
positive culture or other positive test result within the timeframes specified
in subsection B of this section and submit the initial isolate (preferred) or
other initial specimen within five days or the clinical specimen within
two days of a positive result to the Division of Consolidated Laboratory
Services or other public health laboratory where specified in this subsection within
seven days of identification. All specimens must be identified with the
patient and physician information required in 12VAC5-90-90 B.
Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis)
Botulism (Clostridium botulinum)
Brucellosis (Brucella sp.)
Candida auris
Candida haemulonii
Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae
Carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Cholera (Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139)
Coronavirus infection, severe (e.g., SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV)
Diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheriae)
Haemophilus influenzae infection, invasive
Influenza, unsubtypeable
Listeriosis (Listeria monocytogenes)
Meningococcal disease (Neisseria meningitidis)
Plague (Yersinia pestis)
Poliovirus infection
Q fever (Coxiella burnetii)
Salmonellosis (Salmonella spp.)
Shiga toxin-producing E. coli infection (Laboratories that identify a Shiga toxin but do not perform simultaneous culture for Shiga toxin-producing E. coli should forward all positive stool specimens or positive enrichment broths to the Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services for confirmation and further characterization.)
Shigellosis (Shigella spp.)
Streptococcal disease, Group A, invasive
Tuberculosis (A laboratory identifying Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (see 12VAC5-90-225) shall submit a representative and viable sample of the initial culture to the Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services or other laboratory designated by the board to receive such specimen.)
Tularemia (Francisella tularensis)
Typhoid/Paratyphoid infection (Salmonella Typhi, Salmonella Paratyphi (all types))
Vancomycin-intermediate or vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection
Vibriosis (Vibrio spp., Photobacterium damselae, Grimontia hollisae)
Yersiniosis (Yersinia spp.)
Other diseases as may be requested by the health department.
E. Neonatal abstinence syndrome. Neonatal abstinence syndrome shall be reported by physicians and directors of medical care facilities when a newborn has been diagnosed with neonatal abstinence syndrome, a condition characterized by clinical signs of withdrawal from exposure to prescribed or illicit drugs. Reports shall be submitted within one month of diagnosis by entering the information into the Department of Health's online Confidential Morbidity Report portal (http://www.vdh.virginia.gov/clinicians).
F. Outbreaks. The occurrence of outbreaks or clusters of any illness that may represent a group expression of an illness that may be of public health concern shall be reported to the local health department immediately by the most rapid means available, preferably by telephone.
G. Toxic substance-related illnesses. All toxic substance-related illnesses, including pesticide and heavy metal poisoning or illness resulting from exposure to an occupational dust or fiber or radioactive substance, shall be reported.
If such illness is verified or suspected and presents an emergency or a serious threat to public health or safety, the report of such illness shall be made immediately by the most rapid means available, preferably by telephone.
H. Unusual occurrence of disease of public health concern. Unusual or emerging conditions of public health concern shall be reported to the local health department immediately by the most rapid means available, preferably by telephone. In addition, the commissioner or the commissioner's designee may establish surveillance systems for diseases or conditions that are not on the list of reportable diseases. Such surveillance may be established to identify cases (delineate the magnitude of the situation), to identify the mode of transmission and risk factors for the disease, and to identify and implement appropriate action to protect public health. Any person reporting information at the request of the department for special surveillance or other epidemiological studies shall be immune from liability as provided by § 32.1-38 of the Code of Virginia.
12VAC5-90-90. Those required to report.
A. Physicians. Each physician who treats or examines any
person who is suffering from or who is suspected of having a reportable disease
or condition shall report , at a minimum, that person's name, address,
age, date of birth, race, sex, and pregnancy status for females; name of
disease diagnosed or suspected; the date of onset of illness; available
laboratory tests and results; and the name, address, and telephone number of
the physician and medical facility where the examination was made, except
that influenza should be reported by number of cases only (and type of
influenza, if available). Reports are to be made to the local health
department serving the jurisdiction where the physician practices. A physician
may designate someone to report on his behalf, but the physician remains
responsible for ensuring that the appropriate report is made. Any physician,
designee, or organization making such report as authorized herein shall be
immune from liability as provided by § 32.1-38 of the Code of Virginia.
Such reports shall be made within the timeframes specified
in 12VAC5-90-80 to the local health department serving the jurisdiction in
which the facility is located. Reports shall be made on a Form
Epi-1, a computer generated printout containing the data items requested on
Form Epi-1,via the Department of Health's online Confidential Morbidity
Report portal (http://www.vdh.virginia.gov/clinicians) or a CDC or VDH disease-specific
surveillance form.that provides the same information and shall be made within
three days of the suspicion or confirmation of disease except that those
identified in 12VAC5-90-80 C shall be reported immediately by the most rapid
means available, preferably by telephone, to the local health department
serving the jurisdiction in which the facility is located. Reporting
may be done by means of secure electronic transmission upon agreement of the
physician and the department.
Additional elements are required to be reported for individuals with confirmed or suspected active tuberculosis disease. Refer to Part X (12VAC5-90-225 et seq.) for details on these requirements.
B. Directors of laboratories. Laboratory directors shall
report any laboratory examination of any clinical specimen, whether
performed in-house or referred to an out-of-state laboratory, which yields
evidence, by the laboratory method(s) indicated or any other confirmatory
test, of a disease listed in 12VAC5-90-80 B. Laboratory directors shall
report results that are performed in-house or referred to a reference
laboratory, with the following exception: if the laboratory director ascertains
that the reference laboratory that tests a specimen reports to the department
electronically, then those reference laboratory findings do not need to be
reported by the laboratory of origin.
Each report shall give the source of the specimen and the
laboratory method and result; the name, address, age, date of birth, race, sex,
and pregnancy status for females (if known) of the person from whom the
specimen was obtained; and the name, address, and telephone number of the
physician at whose request and medical facility at which the examination was
made. When the influenza virus is isolated, the type should be reported, if
available. Reports shall be made within three days of identification of
evidence of disease, except that those identified in 12VAC5-90-80 C shall be
reported immediately by the most rapid means available, preferably by
telephone, the timeframes specified in 12VAC5-90-80 to the local
health department serving the jurisdiction in which the laboratory is located.
Reports shall be made on Form Epi-1via the Department's online
Confidential Morbidity Report portal or on the laboratory's own form if it
includes the required information. Computer generated reports containing the
required information may be submitted. Reporting may be done by means of secure
electronic transmission upon agreement of the laboratory director and the
department. Reports of HIV genetic nucleotide sequence data associated with HIV
drug resistance tests must be submitted electronically. Any person making such
report as authorized herein shall be immune from liability as provided by §
32.1-38 of the Code of Virginia.
A laboratory identifying evidence of any of the following
conditions shall notify the local health department of the positive culture or
other positive test result within the timeframes specified in 12VAC5-90-80 and
submit the initial isolate or other initial specimen to the Division of Consolidated
Laboratory Services within seven days of identification. All specimens must be
identified with the patient and physician information required in this
subsection.
Anthrax
Botulism
Brucellosis
Cholera
Diphtheria
E. coli infection, Shiga toxin-producing. (Laboratories that
use a Shiga toxin EIA methodology but do not perform simultaneous culture for
Shiga toxin-producing E. coli should forward all positive stool specimens or
positive enrichment broths to the Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services for
confirmation and further characterization.)
Haemophilus influenzae infection, invasive
Influenza A, novel virus
Listeriosis
Meningococcal disease
Pertussis
Plague
Poliovirus infection
Q fever
Salmonellosis
Shigellosis
Streptococcal disease, Group A, invasive
Tuberculosis (A laboratory identifying Mycobacterium
tuberculosis complex (see 12VAC5-90-225) shall submit a representative and
viable sample of the initial culture to the Division of Consolidated Laboratory
Services or other laboratory designated by the board to receive such specimen.)
Tularemia
Typhoid/Paratyphoid fever
Vancomycin-intermediate or vancomycin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus infection
Vibrio infection, including infections due to Photobacterium
damselae and Grimontia hollisae
Yersiniosis
Other diseases as may be requested by the health department
When a clinical specimen yields evidence indicating the presence of a select agent or toxin as defined by federal regulations in 42 CFR Part 73, the person in charge of the laboratory shall contact the Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services and arrange to forward an isolate for confirmation. If a select agent or toxin has been confirmed in a clinical specimen, the laboratory director shall consult with Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services or CDC regarding isolate transport or destruction.
Laboratories operating within a medical care facility shall be
considered to be in compliance with the requirement to notify the local health
department when the director of that medical care facility assumes the
reporting responsibility; however, laboratories are still required to submit
isolates to the Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services or other
designated laboratory as noted in this subsection 12VAC5-90-80 D
unless the laboratory has submitted an exemption request that has been approved
by the department.
C. Persons in charge of a medical care facility. Any person in
charge of a medical care facility shall make a report to the local health
department serving the jurisdiction where the facility is located of the
occurrence in or admission to the facility of a patient with a reportable
disease listed in 12VAC5-90-80 A unless he has evidence that the occurrence has
been reported by a physician. Any person making such report as authorized
herein shall be immune from liability as provided by § 32.1-38 of the Code
of Virginia. The requirement to report shall include all inpatient, outpatient,
and emergency care departments within the medical care facility. Such report
shall contain the patient's name, address, age, date of birth, race, sex, and
pregnancy status for females; name of disease being reported; available
laboratory tests and results; the date of admission; hospital chart number;
date expired (when applicable); and attending physician. Influenza should be
reported by number of cases only (and type of influenza, if available).
Reports shall be made within three days of the suspicion or confirmation of
disease except that those identified in 12VAC5-90-80 C shall be reported immediately
by the most rapid means available, preferably by telephone, the
timeframes specified in 12VAC5-90-80 to the local health department serving
the jurisdiction in which the facility is located. Reports shall be made on
Form Epi-1, a computer generated printout containing the data items requested
on Form Epi-1, via the Department of Health's online Confidential
Morbidity Report portal (http://www.vdh.virginia.gov/clinicians), or a CDC
or VDH disease-specific surveillance form that provides the same
information. Reporting may be done by means of secure electronic
transmission upon agreement of the medical care facility and the department.
A person in charge of a medical care facility may assume the reporting responsibility on behalf of the director of the laboratory operating within the facility.
D. Persons in charge of a residential or day program, service, or facility licensed or operated by any agency of the Commonwealth, or a school, child care center, or summer camp. Any person in charge of a residential or day program, service, or facility licensed or operated by any agency of the Commonwealth, or a school, child care center, or summer camp as defined in § 35.1-1 of the Code of Virginia shall report immediately to the local health department the presence or suspected presence in his program, service, facility, school, child care center, or summer camp of persons who have common symptoms suggesting an outbreak situation. Such persons may report additional information, including identifying and contact information for individuals with communicable diseases of public health concern or individuals who are involved in outbreaks that occur in their facilities, as necessary to facilitate public health investigation and disease control. Any person so reporting shall be immune from liability as provided by § 32.1-38 of the Code of Virginia.
E. Local health directors. The local health director shall forward any report of a disease or report of evidence of a disease which has been made on a resident of his jurisdiction to the Office of Epidemiology within three days of receipt. This report shall be submitted immediately by the most rapid means available if the disease is one requiring rapid communication, as required in 12VAC5-90-80 C. All such rapid reporting shall be confirmed in writing and submitted to the Office of Epidemiology, by either a paper report or entry into a shared secure electronic disease surveillance system, within three days. Furthermore, the local health director shall immediately forward to the appropriate local health director any disease reports on individuals residing in the latter's jurisdiction or to the Office of Epidemiology on individuals residing outside Virginia. The Office of Epidemiology shall be responsible for notifying other state health departments of reported illnesses in their residents and for notifying CDC as necessary and appropriate.
F. Persons in charge of hospitals, nursing facilities or nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and correctional facilities. In accordance with § 32.1-37.1 of the Code of Virginia, any person in charge of a hospital, nursing facility or nursing home, assisted living facility, or correctional facility shall, at the time of transferring custody of any dead body to any person practicing funeral services, notify the person practicing funeral services or his agent if the dead person was known to have had, immediately prior to death, an infectious disease which may be transmitted through exposure to any bodily fluids. These include any of the following infectious diseases:
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection
Hepatitis B (acute and chronic)
Hepatitis C (acute and chronic)
Rabies
Smallpox (Variola virus)
Syphilis, infectious (Treponema pallidum)
Tuberculosis, active disease (Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex)
Vaccinia, disease or adverse event
Viral hemorrhagic fever
G. Employees, conditional employees, and persons in charge of food establishments. 12VAC5-421-80 of the Food Regulations requires a food employee or conditional employee to notify the person in charge of the food establishment when diagnosed with certain diseases that are transmissible through food and requires the person in charge of the food establishment to notify the regulatory authority. Refer to 12VAC5-421-80 for further guidance and clarification regarding these reporting requirements.
12VAC5-90-103. Isolation for communicable disease of public health threat.
A. Application. The commissioner, in his sole discretion, may invoke the provisions of Article 3.02 (§ 32.1-48.05 et seq.) of Chapter 2 of Title 32.1 of the Code of Virginia and may declare the isolation of any individual or individuals upon a determination that:
1. Such individual or individuals are known to have been infected with or are reasonably suspected to have been infected with a communicable disease of public health threat;
2. Exceptional circumstances render the procedures of Article 3.01 (§ 32.1-48.01 et seq.) of Chapter 2 of Title 32.1 of the Code of Virginia to be insufficient, or the individual or individuals have failed or refused to comply voluntarily with the control measures directed by the commissioner in response to a communicable disease of public health threat; and
3. Isolation is the necessary means to contain a communicable disease of public health threat, to ensure that such isolated individual or individuals receive appropriate medical treatment subject to the provisions of § 32.1-44 of the Code of Virginia, or to protect health care providers and others who may come into contact with such infected individual or individuals.
The commissioner, in his sole discretion, may also order the isolation of an affected area if, in addition to the above, the Governor has declared a state of emergency for such affected area of the Commonwealth.
B. Documentation. For isolation for a communicable disease of public health threat, information about the infection or suspected infection, the individual, individuals, and/or affected area, and the nature or suspected nature of the exposure shall be duly recorded by the local health department in consultation with the Office of Epidemiology. This information shall be sufficient to enable documenting a record of findings and to enable the commissioner to prepare the order of isolation, including the information required in § 32.1-48.12 of the Code of Virginia. In addition, sufficient information on individuals shall be maintained by the local health department to enable appropriate follow-up of individuals for health status evaluation and treatment as well as compliance with the order of isolation.
The commissioner shall ensure that the protected health information of any individual or individuals subject to the order of isolation is disclosed only in compliance with state and federal law.
C. Means of isolation. The local health department shall assess the situation, and in consultation with the Office of Epidemiology, identify the least restrictive means of isolation that effectively protects unexposed and susceptible individuals. The place of isolation selected shall allow the most freedom of movement and communication with family members and other contacts without allowing disease transmission to other individuals and shall allow the appropriate level of medical care needed by isolated individuals to the extent practicable. The commissioner, in his sole discretion, may order the isolated individual or individuals to remain in their residences, to remain in another place where they are present, or to report to a place or places designated by the commissioner for the duration of their isolation.
The commissioner's order of isolation shall be for a duration consistent with the known period of communicability of the communicable disease of public health threat or, if the course of the disease is unknown or uncertain, for a period anticipated as being consistent with the period of communicability of other similar infectious agents. In the situation where an area is under isolation, the duration of isolation shall take into account the transmission characteristics and known or suspected period of communicability.
D. Delivery. The local health department shall deliver the order of isolation, or ensure its delivery by an appropriate party such as a law-enforcement officer or health department employee, to the affected individual or individuals in person to the extent practicable. If, in the opinion of the commissioner, the scope of the notification would exceed the capacity of the local health department to ensure individual notification in a timely manner, then print, radio, television, Internet, and/or other available means shall be used to inform those affected.
E. Enforcement. Upon finding that there is probable cause
to believe that any individual or individuals who are subject to an order of
isolation may fail or refuse to comply with such order, the commissioner in his
sole discretion may include in the order a requirement that such individual or
individuals are to be taken immediately into custody by law-enforcement
agencies and detained for the duration of the order of isolation or until the
commissioner determines that the risk of noncompliance is no longer present.
For any individual or individuals identified as, or for whom probable cause
exists that he may be, in violation of any order of isolation, or for whom
probable cause exists that he may fail or refuse to comply with any such order,
the enforcement authority directed by the commissioner to law-enforcement
agencies shall include but need not be limited to the power to detain or
arrest.
Any individual or individuals so detained shall be held in the least restrictive environment that can provide any required health care or other services for such individual. The commissioner shall ensure that law-enforcement personnel responsible for enforcing an order or orders of isolation are informed of appropriate measures to take to protect themselves from contracting the disease of public health threat.
F. Health status monitoring. The local health department shall monitor the health of those under isolation either by regular telephone calls, visits, self-reports, or by reports of caregivers or healthcare providers or by other means.
G. Essential needs. Upon issuance of an order of isolation to an individual or individuals by the commissioner, the local health department shall manage the isolation, in conjunction with local emergency management resources, such that individual essential needs can be met to the extent practicable. Upon issuance of an order of isolation by the commissioner for an affected area, existing emergency protocols pursuant to Chapter 3.2 (§ 44-146.13 et seq.) of Title 44 of the Code of Virginia shall be utilized for mobilizing appropriate resources to ensure essential needs are met.
H. Appeals. Any individual or individuals subject to an order of isolation or a court-ordered confirmation or extension of any such order may file an appeal of the order of isolation in accordance with the provisions of § 32.1-48.13 of the Code of Virginia. An appeal shall not stay any order of isolation.
I. Release from isolation. Once the commissioner determines that an individual or individuals no longer pose a threat to the public health, the order of isolation has expired, or the order of isolation has been vacated by the court, the individual or individuals under the order of isolation shall be released immediately. If the risk of an infected individual transmitting the communicable disease of public health threat to other individuals continues to exist, an order of isolation may be developed to extend the restriction prior to release from isolation.
J. Affected area. If the criteria in subsection A of this section are met and an area is known or suspected to have been affected, then the commissioner shall notify the Governor of the situation and the need to order isolation for the affected area during the known or suspected time of exposure. In order for an affected area to be isolated, the Governor must declare a state of emergency for the affected area.
If an order of isolation is issued for an affected area during the known or suspected time of exposure, the commissioner shall cause the order of isolation to be communicated to the individuals residing or located in the affected area. The use of multiple forms of communication, including but not limited to radio, television, internet, and/or other available means, may be required in order to reach the individuals who were in the affected area during the known or suspected time of exposure.
The provisions for documentation, means of isolation, enforcement, health status monitoring, essential needs, and release from isolation described above will apply to the isolation of affected areas. Appropriate management of a disease of public health threat for an affected area may require the coordinated use of local, regional, state, and national resources. In specifying one or more affected areas to be placed under isolation, the objective will be to protect as many people as possible using the least restrictive means. As a result, defining the precise boundaries and time frame of the exposure may not be possible, or may change as additional information becomes available. When this occurs, the commissioner shall ensure that the description of the affected area is in congruence with the Governor's declaration of emergency and shall ensure that the latest information is communicated to those in or exposed to the affected area.
12VAC5-90-107. Quarantine.
A. Application. The commissioner, in his sole discretion, may invoke the provisions of Article 3.02 (§ 32.1-48.05 et seq.) of Chapter 2 of Title 32.1 of the Code of Virginia and may order a complete or modified quarantine of any individual or individuals upon a determination that:
1. Such individual or individuals are known to have been exposed to or are reasonably suspected to have been exposed to a communicable disease of public health threat;
2. Exceptional circumstances render the procedures of Article 3.01 (§ 32.1-48.01 et seq.) of Chapter 2 of Title 32.1 of the Code of Virginia to be insufficient, or the individual or individuals have failed or refused to comply voluntarily with the control measures directed by the commissioner in response to a communicable disease of public health threat; and
3. Quarantine is the necessary means to contain a communicable disease of public health threat to which an individual or individuals have been or may have been exposed and thus may become infected.
The commissioner, in his sole discretion, may also order the quarantine of an affected area if, in addition to the above, the Governor has declared a state of emergency for such affected area of the Commonwealth.
B. Documentation. For quarantine for a communicable disease of public health threat, information about the infection or suspected infection; the individual, individuals, and/or affected area; and the nature or suspected nature of the exposure shall be duly recorded by the local health department, in consultation with the Office of Epidemiology. This information shall be sufficient to enable documenting a record of findings and enable the commissioner to prepare a written order of quarantine, including the information required in § 32.1-48.09 of the Code of Virginia. In addition, sufficient information on individuals shall be maintained by the local health department to enable appropriate follow-up of individuals for health status evaluation and treatment as well as compliance with the order of quarantine.
The commissioner shall ensure that the protected health information of any individual or individuals subject to the order of quarantine is disclosed only in compliance with state and federal law.
C. Means of quarantine. The local health department shall assess the situation, and in consultation with the Office of Epidemiology, shall recommend to the commissioner the least restrictive means of quarantine that effectively protects unexposed and susceptible individuals. The place of quarantine selected shall allow the most freedom of movement and communication with family members and other contacts without allowing disease transmission to others.
The commissioner, in his sole discretion, may order the quarantined individual or individuals to remain in their residences, to remain in another place where they are present, or to report to a place or places designated by the commissioner for the duration of their quarantine.
The commissioner's order of quarantine shall be for a duration consistent with the known incubation period of the communicable disease of public health threat or, if the incubation period is unknown or uncertain, for a period anticipated as being consistent with the incubation period for other similar infectious agents. In the situation where an area is under quarantine, the duration of quarantine shall take into account the transmission characteristics and known or suspected incubation period.
D. Delivery. The local health department shall deliver the order of quarantine, or ensure its delivery by an appropriate party such as a law-enforcement officer or health department employee, to the affected individual or individuals in person to the extent practicable. If, in the opinion of the commissioner, the scope of the notification would exceed the capacity of the local health department to ensure notification in a timely manner, then print, radio, television, Internet, and/or other available means shall be used to inform those affected.
E. Enforcement. Upon finding that there is probable cause
to believe that any individual or individuals who are subject to an order of
quarantine may fail or refuse to comply with such order, the commissioner in
his sole discretion may include in the order a requirement that such individual
or individuals are to be taken immediately into custody by law-enforcement
agencies and detained for the duration of the order of quarantine or until the
commissioner determines that the risk of and from noncompliance is no longer
present. For any individual or individuals identified as, or for whom
probable cause exists that he may be, in violation of any order of quarantine,
or for whom probable cause exists that he may fail or refuse to comply with any
such order, the enforcement authority directed by the commissioner to
law-enforcement agencies shall include but need not be limited to the power to
detain or arrest.
Any individual or individuals so detained shall be held in the least restrictive environment that can provide any required health care or other services for such individual. The commissioner shall ensure that law-enforcement personnel responsible for enforcing an order or orders of quarantine are informed of appropriate measures to take to protect themselves from contracting the disease of public health threat.
F. Health status monitoring. The local health department shall monitor the health of those under quarantine either by regular telephone calls, visits, self-reports, or by reports of caregivers or healthcare providers or by other means. If an individual or individuals develop symptoms compatible with the communicable disease of public health threat, then 12VAC5-90-103 would apply to the individual or individuals.
G. Essential needs. Upon issuance of an order of quarantine to an individual or individuals by the commissioner, the local health department shall manage the quarantine, in conjunction with local emergency management resources, such that individual essential needs can be met to the extent practicable. Upon issuance of an order of quarantine by the commissioner for an affected area, existing emergency protocols pursuant to Chapter 3.2 (§ 44-146.13 et seq.) of Title 44 of the Code of Virginia shall be utilized for mobilizing appropriate resources to ensure essential needs are met.
H. Appeals. Any individual or individuals subject to an order of quarantine or a court-ordered confirmation or extension of any such order may file an appeal of the order of quarantine in accordance with the provisions of § 32.1-48.10 of the Code of Virginia. An appeal shall not stay any order of quarantine.
I. Release from quarantine. Once the commissioner determines that an individual or individuals are no longer at risk of becoming infected and pose no risk of transmitting the communicable disease of public health threat to other individuals, the order of quarantine has expired, or the order of quarantine has been vacated by the court, the individuals under the order of quarantine shall be released immediately. If the risk of an individual becoming infected and transmitting the communicable disease of public health threat to other individuals continues to exist, an order of quarantine may be developed to extend the restriction prior to release from quarantine.
J. Affected area. If the criteria in subsection A of this section are met and an area is known or suspected to have been affected, then the commissioner shall notify the Governor of the situation and the need to order quarantine for the affected area. In order for an affected area to be quarantined, the Governor must declare a state of emergency for the affected area.
If an order of quarantine is issued for an affected area, the commissioner shall cause the order of quarantine to be communicated to the individuals residing or located in the affected area. The use of multiple forms of communication, including but not limited to radio, television, Internet, and/or other available means, may be required in order to reach the individuals who were in the affected area during the known or suspected time of exposure.
The provisions for documentation, means of quarantine, enforcement, health status monitoring, essential needs, and release from quarantine described above will apply to the quarantine of affected areas. Appropriate management of a disease of public health threat for an affected area may require the coordinated use of local, regional, state, and national resources. In specifying one or more affected areas to be placed under quarantine, the objective will be to protect as many people as possible using the least restrictive means. As a result, defining the precise boundaries and time frame of the exposure may not be possible, or may change as additional information becomes available. When this occurs, the commissioner shall ensure that the description of the affected area is in congruence with the Governor's declaration of emergency and shall ensure that the latest information is communicated to those in or exposed to the affected area.
Part VII
Prevention of Blindness from Ophthalmia Neonatorum
12VAC5-90-140. Procedure for preventing ophthalmia neonatorum.
The physician, nurse, or midwife in charge of the infant's
care after delivery of a baby shall ensure that one of the following is
administered in each eye of that newborn baby as soon as possible after birth:
(i) two drops of a 1.0% silver nitrate solution; (ii) a 1-cm ribbon of 1.0%
tetracycline ophthalmic ointment; or (iii) a 1-cm ribbon of 0.5%
erythromycin ophthalmic ointment is administered in each eye of that newborn
baby as soon as possible. This treatment shall be recorded in the medical
record of the infant.
Part X
Protocol for Identification of Children with Elevated Blood Lead Levels
12VAC5-90-215. Schedule and criteria for and confirmation of blood lead testing and information to be provided.
A. Schedule for testing. Every child shall be tested to determine the blood lead level at 12 months and 24 months of age if the health care provider determines that the child meets any of the criteria listed in subsection B of this section. Children 25 months through 72 months of age who present for medical care and meet any of criteria of subsection B of this section shall also be tested if they have either not previously been tested for blood lead level or were previously tested but experienced a change since testing that has resulted in an increased risk of lead exposure based on the criteria listed in subsection B of this section.
B. Criteria for testing.
1. The child is eligible for or receiving benefits from Medicaid or the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC);
2. The child is living in or regularly visiting a house,
apartment, dwelling, structure, or child care facility built before 19601950;
3. The child is living in or regularly visiting a house, apartment, dwelling, structure, or child care facility built before 1978 that has (i) peeling or chipping paint or (ii) recent (within the last six months) ongoing or planned renovations;
4. The child is living in or regularly visiting a house, apartment, dwelling, or other structure in which one or more persons have blood lead testing yielding evidence of lead exposure;
5. The child is living with an adult whose job, hobby, or other activity involves exposure to lead;
6. The child is living near an active lead smelter, battery recycling plant, or other industry likely to release lead;
7. The child's parent, guardian, or other person standing in loco parentis requests the child's blood be tested due to any suspected exposure; or
8. The child is a recent refugee or immigrant or is adopted from outside of the United States.
C. Exceptions. A child who does not meet any of the schedule or criteria provided in subsection A or B of this section is considered to be at low risk, and testing is not required but may be conducted at the discretion of the health care provider. The testing requirement shall be waived if the parent, guardian, or other person standing in loco parentis of a child objects to the testing on the basis that the procedure conflicts with his religious tenets or practices.
D. Confirmation of blood lead levels. Blood lead level testing shall be performed on venous or capillary blood. Tests of venous blood performed by a laboratory certified by the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in accordance with 42 USC § 263a, the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment of 1988 (CLIA-certified), are considered confirmatory. Tests of venous blood performed by any other laboratory and tests of capillary blood shall be confirmed by a repeat blood test, preferably venous, performed by a CLIA-certified laboratory. Such confirmatory testing shall be performed in accordance with the following schedule:
1. Confirmatory testing is not required if the result of the capillary test is below CDC's reference value.
1.2. Within one to three months if the result of
the capillary test is at or above the CDC's reference value and up to 9
micrograms of lead per deciliter of whole blood (µg/dL).
2.3. Within one week to one month if the result
of the capillary test is 10-44 µg/dL. The higher this test result, the more
urgent the need for a confirmatory test.
3.4. Within 48 hours if the result of the
capillary test is 45-59 µg/dL.
4.5. Within 24 hours if the result of the
capillary test is 60-69 µg/dL.
5.6. Immediately as an emergency laboratory test
if the result of the capillary test is 70 µg/dL or higher.
E. Information to be provided. As part of regular well-check visits for all children, the health care provider shall make available to parents, guardians, or other persons standing in loco parentis information on the dangers of lead poisoning, potential sources of lead and ways to prevent exposure, and a list of available lead-related resources. When blood lead level testing is performed, the health care provider shall share the child's blood lead level test result with the child's parent, guardian, or other person standing in loco parentis and report to the local health department in accordance with the requirements of 12VAC5-90-80.
Part XI
Tuberculosis Control
12VAC5-90-225. Additional data to be reported related to persons with active tuberculosis disease (confirmed or suspected).
A. Physicians and directors of medical care facilities are required to submit all of the following:
1. An initial report to be completed when there are reasonable grounds to suspect that a person has active TB disease, but no later than when antituberculosis drug therapy is initiated. The reports must include the following: the affected person's name; age; date of birth; gender; address; pertinent clinical, radiographic, microbiologic and pathologic reports, whether pending or final; such other information as may be needed to locate the patient for follow-up; and name, address, and telephone number of the treating physician.
2. A secondary report to be completed simultaneously or within
one to two weeks following the initial report. The report must include: the
date, method, and results of tuberculin skin test (TST) tests
for tuberculosis infection; the date and results of the initial and any
follow-up chest radiographs; the dates and results of bacteriologic or
pathologic testing, the antituberculosis drug regimen, including names of the
drugs, dosages and frequencies of administration, and start date; the date and
results of drug susceptibility testing; HIV status; contact screening
information; and name, address, and telephone number of treating physician.
3. Subsequent reports are to be made when updated information is available. Subsequent reports are required when: clinical status changes, the treatment regimen changes; treatment ceases for any reason; or there are any updates to laboratory results, treatment adherence, name, address, and telephone number of current provider, patient location or contact information, or other additional clinical information.
4. Physicians and/or directors of medical care facilities responsible for the care of a patient with active tuberculosis disease are required to develop and maintain a written treatment plan. This plan must be in place no later than the time when antituberculosis drug therapy is initiated. Patient adherence to this treatment plan must be documented. The treatment plan and adherence record are subject to review by the local health director or his designee at any time during the course of treatment.
5. The treatment plan for the following categories of patients must be submitted to the local health director or his designee for approval no later than the time when antituberculosis drug therapy is started or modified:
a. For individuals who are inpatients or incarcerated, the responsible provider or facility must submit the treatment plan for approval prior to discharge or transfer.
b. Individuals, whether inpatient, incarcerated, or outpatient, who also have one of the following conditions:
(1) HIV infection.
(2) Known or suspected active TB disease resistant to rifampin, rifabutin, rifapentine or other rifamycin with or without resistance to any other drug.
(3) A history of prior treated or untreated active TB disease, or a history of relapsed active TB disease.
(4) A demonstrated history of nonadherence to any medical treatment regimen.
B. Laboratories are required to submit the following:
1. Results of smears that are positive for acid fast bacilli.
2. Results of cultures positive for any member of the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (i.e., M. tuberculosis, M. bovis, M.
africanum) or any other mycobacteria.
3. Results of rapid methodologies, including acid hybridization or nucleic acid amplification, which are indicative of M. tuberculosis complex or any other mycobacteria.
4. Results of tests for antimicrobial susceptibility performed
on cultures positive for tubercle bacilliM. tuberculosis complex.
5. Results of tests for tuberculosis infection.
5.6. Laboratories, whether testing is done
in-house or referred to an out-of-state laboratory, shall submit a
representative and viable sample of the initial culture positive for any member
of the M. tuberculosis complex to the Virginia Division of Consolidated
Laboratory Services or other laboratory designated by the board to receive such
specimen.
Part XIII
Reporting of Dangerous Microbes and Pathogens
12VAC5-90-280. Reporting of dangerous microbes and pathogens.
A. Definitions. The following words and terms when used in this part shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Biologic agent" means any microorganism
(including, but not limited to, bacteria, viruses, fungi, rickettsiae, or
protozoa), or infectious substance, or any naturally occurring, bioengineered,
or synthesized component of any such microorganism or infectious substance,
capable of causing death, disease, or other biological malfunction in a human,
an animal, a plant, or other living organism; deterioration of food, water,
equipment, supplies, or material of any kind; or deleterious alteration of the
environment.
"CDC" means the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
"Diagnosis" means the analysis of specimens for
the purpose of identifying or confirming the presence or characteristics of a
select agent or toxin, provided that such analysis is directly related to
protecting the public health or safety.
"Proficiency testing" means a sponsored,
time-limited analytical trial whereby one or more analytes, previously
confirmed by the sponsor, are submitted to the testing laboratory for analysis
and where final results are graded, scores are recorded and provided to
participants, and scores for participants are evaluated.
"Responsible official" means any person in charge
of directing or supervising a laboratory conducting business in the
Commonwealth of Virginia. At colleges and universities, the responsible
official shall be the president of the college or university or his designee.
At private, state, or federal organizations, the responsible official shall be
the laboratory director or a chief officer of the organization or his designee.
"Select agent or toxin" or "select agent and toxin" means all those biological agents or toxins as defined by federal regulations in 42 CFR Part 73, including Health and Human Services select agents and toxins and overlap select agents and toxins. "Dangerous microbes and pathogens" will be known as "select agents and toxins".
"Toxin" means the toxic material or product of
plants, animals, microorganisms (including but not limited to bacteria,
viruses, fungi, rickettsiae, or protozoa); or infectious substances; or a
recombinant or synthesized molecule, whatever the origin and method of
production; and includes any poisonous substance or biological product that may
be engineered as a result of biotechnology or produced by a living organism; or
any poisonous isomer or biological product, homolog, or derivative of such a
substance.
"Verification" means the process required to
assure the accuracy, precision, and the analytical sensitivity and specificity
of any procedure used for diagnosis.
B. Administration. The dangerous microbes and pathogens
will be known as "select agents and toxins." The select agent and
toxin registry will be maintained by the Virginia Department of Health, Office
of Epidemiology, Division of Surveillance and Investigation.
C. Reportable agents. The board declares the select agents
and toxins and overlap select agents and toxins outlined in 42 CFR Part 73 to
be reportable and adopts it herein by reference including subsequent amendments
and editions. The select agents and toxins are to be reportable by the persons
enumerated in subsection F of this section.
D.B. Items to report. Each report shall be
made on a form determined by the department and shall contain the
following: name, source and characterization information on select agents and
toxins and quantities held; objectives of the work with the agent; location
(including building and room) where each select agent or toxin is stored or
used; identification information of persons with access to each agent; identification
information of the person in charge of each of the agents; and the name
and address of the laboratory and the name, position and identification
information of one responsible official as a single point of contact for the
organization. The report shall also indicate whether the laboratory is
registered with the CDC Select Agent Program and may contain additional
information as required by 42 CFR Part 73 or the department.
E.C. Timing of reports. Reports shall be made
to the department within seven calendar days of submission of an application to
the CDC Select Agent Program. By January 31 of every year, laboratoriesthe
responsible official at a laboratory as designated by the federal select agent
program shall provide a written update to the department, which shall
include a copy of the federal registration certificate received through the CDC
Select Agent ProgramDivision of Surveillance and Investigation in the
Office of Epidemiology containing the information specified in subsection B.
In the event that a select agent or toxin that has
previously been reported to the department is destroyed, a copy of federal
forms addressing the destruction of the select agent or toxin must be submitted
to the department within seven calendar days of submission to the CDC Select
Agent Program.
In the event that a select agent or toxin, or a specimen or
isolate from a specimen containing a select agent or toxin, has previously been
reported to the department and is subsequently transferred to a facility
eligible for receiving the items, a copy of federal forms addressing the
transfer of the select agent or toxin must be submitted to the department
within seven calendar days of submission to the CDC Select Agent Program.
In the event of a suspected release, loss, or theft of any select agent or toxin, the responsible official at a laboratory as designated by the federal select agent program shall make a report to the department immediately by the most rapid means available, preferably by telephone. The report shall be submitted to the Division of Surveillance and Investigation in the Office of Epidemiology. The rapid report shall be followed up by a written report within seven calendar days and shall include the following information:
1. The name of the biologic agent and any identifying information (e.g., strain or other characterization information);
2. An estimate of the quantity released, lost, or stolen;
3. An estimate of the time during which the release, loss, or theft occurred; and
4. The location (building, room) from or in which the release, loss, or theft occurred. The report may contain additional information as required by 42 CFR Part 73 or the department.
If a release has occurred, the report shall also include the nature, environment, and location of the release; number, names, and position of exposed individuals; and actions taken as a result of the release.
The department shall be notified in writing of any change
to information previously submitted to the department. If a new application or
an amendment to an existing application is filed with the CDC Select Agent
Program, a copy of the application or amendment shall be submitted to the
department within seven calendar days of submission to the CDC Select Agent
Program.
F. Those required to report. The laboratory director shall
be responsible for annual reporting of select agents and toxins to the Virginia
Department of Health and for the reporting of any changes within the time
periods as specified within these regulations. Such reports shall be made on
forms to be determined by the department. Any person making such reports as
authorized herein shall be immune from liability as provided by § 32.1-38 of
the Code of Virginia.
G. Exemption from reporting. A person who detects a select
agent or toxin for the purpose of diagnosing a disease, verification, or
proficiency testing and either transfers the specimens or isolates containing
the select agent or toxin to a facility eligible for receiving them or destroys
them on site is not required to make a report except as required by
12VAC5-90-80 and 12VAC5-90-90. Proper destruction of the agent shall take place
through autoclaving, incineration, or by a sterilization or neutralization
process sufficient to cause inactivation. The transfer or destruction shall
occur within seven calendar days after identification of a select agent or
toxin used for diagnosis or testing and within 90 calendar days after receipt
for proficiency testing.
Any additional exemptions from reporting under 42 CFR Part
73, including subsequent amendments and editions, are also exempt from
reporting under this regulation; however, the department shall be notified of
the exemption by submitting a copy of federal forms addressing the exemption
within seven calendar days of submission to the CDC Select Agent Program.
H.D. Release of reported information. Reports
submitted to the select agent and toxin registry shall be confidential and
shall not be a public record pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act,
regardless of submitter. Release of information on select agents or toxins
shall be made only by order of the State Health Commissioner to the CDC and
state and federal law-enforcement agencies in any investigation involving the
release, theft, or loss of a select agent or toxin required to be reported to
the department under this regulation. Any person making such reports as
authorized herein shall be immune from liability as provided by § 32.1-38 of
the Code of Virginia.
Part XIV
Reporting of Healthcare-Associated Infections
12VAC5-90-370. Reporting of healthcare-associated infections.
A. Reportable infections. FacilitiesAcute care
hospitals that report data into the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's
National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) foras a requirement of the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Hospital Inpatient Quality
Reporting Program shall share the data, through the NHSN, with the
department.
B. Liability protection and data release. Any person making such report as authorized herein shall be immune from liability as provided by § 32.1-38 of the Code of Virginia. Infection rate data may be released to the public by the department upon request. Data shall be aggregated to ensure that no individual patient may be identified.
FORMS (12VAC5-90)
Confidential
Morbidity Report, Epi-1 (rev. 10/2011)
Virginia Cancer Registry Reporting Form (rev. 1/1998)