Management of Oubreaks - West Virginia Department of Health and
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Transcript Management of Oubreaks - West Virginia Department of Health and
New in the Reportable Disease
Rule, 2007
Danae Bixler, MD, MPH
Infectious Disease Epidemiology
Program
WVDHHR
1
Objectives
• Outline:
– Timeline
– Changes in rule:
• Reporting timeframes
• New diseases to be reported
• Diseases that are no longer reportable
• New sections that impact public health practice
– Common issues that CAN be solved by application to
the rule
– Strengths and limitations of the rule
2
Timeline
• Revision began 2003-4
– Internal review / drafting 2003-4
– Statewide comment 2004
• Legislative session 2005
– Rejected because of fiscal note
• Second attempt 2005-6
– Statewide comment: 2005
– Legislative approval 2006
– Final copy received August 2006
3
Timeline (2)
• Outstanding issues
– Reporting of novel influenza
– Further cleanup:
• Eliminate reporting of occupational health
• Name change to Shigatoxin-producing E coli
• Eliminate provider reporting of chronic hepatitis C
– Final version received March 5, 2007
4
Definitions
• Local Health Officer = Local
health officer or designee
• Commissioner = Commissioner or
designee
5
General Changes
• Five categories of reportable conditions:
–
–
–
–
–
Immediate
24 hours
72 hours
Weekly to LHD
Weekly to state
• Local health departments must report to state in the
•
same timeframe as providers
Electronic reporting mandated from local health
departments when the commissioner declares WVEDSS
operational – anticipated July 2, 2007.
6
Selected Diseases
Reportable Immediately to Local Health
Category I
• Category A BT agents
–
–
–
–
–
–
Anthrax
Botulism
Plague
Smallpox
Tularemia
Viral Hemorrhagic Fever
• Novel influenza infection
• Outbreaks
• Measles and SARS
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Figure 1
Outbreaks Reported and Investigated in West
Virginia, 2001 - 2006
80
73
Number of Outbreaks
70
60
50
40
28
30
18
20
10
26
13
7
0
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Year of Report
8
Immediately Reportable Events –
Provider Responsibilities
• Immediately report by phone to the local
health department
• Include:
– Patient name, address, telephone number,
date of birth, sex, race
– Physician name, address, office phone and fax
– Any other information requested by the
commissioner
9
Immediately Reportable Events –
Laboratory Responsibilities
• Immediately report by phone to the local health
•
department
Include:
– Patient name, address, telephone number, date of
birth, sex, race
– Physician name, address, office phone and fax
– Name of submitter
– Specimen source, date of collection, date of result,
name of test, test result, normal value or range
– Laboratory name, address, phone and fax
10
Immediately Reportable Events –
Local Health Department
Responsibilities
• Immediately report by phone to DHHR:
800-423-1271
• File a WVEDSS report
– Required July 2, 2007
• See 64-7-7 (outbreaks)
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Selected Diseases
Reportable at 24 Hours to Local Health
Category II
• Animal bites
• Hepatitis A, B
• Meningitis (meningococcus, H flu)
• Pertussis
• Staphylococcus aureus resistant to
Vancomycin
• STEC (Enterohemorrhagic E coli)
• Tuberculosis
12
Selected Diseases
Reportable at 72 Hours to Local Health
Category III
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Amebiasis
Campylobacteriosis
Cryptosporidosis
Cyclospora
Giardiasis
Listeriosis
Salmonellosis
Shigellosis
Trichinosis
Yersiniosis
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Selected Diseases
Reportable at 1 Week to Local Health
Category IV
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Arboviral infection
Chickenpox (aggregate total only)
Community-acquired MRSA (invasive)
Death from chickenpox
Influenza-like illness (aggregate only)
Influenza-related death (age < 18)
Legionellosis
Lyme disease
Invasive bacterial diseases (S pneumo, GAS, GBS)
Tuberculosis latent infection
14
Selected Diseases
Reportable at 1 Week to State Health
Category V
•
•
•
•
•
AIDS
Chancroid
Chlamydia
Gonococcal disease
Hepatitis C
– Providers – acute
– Laboratories – all positive test results
• PID
• Syphilis
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Eliminated
• Aseptic meningitis
• Bacterial meningitis, other
• Encephalitis, other
• Hepatitis C, chronic (from providers)
• Herpes
• Occupational illness
• Rheumatic Fever
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Added!
Disease
Timeframe
Bioterrorist event
Immediate
Novel influenza infection, animal
or human
SARS coronavirus infection
Immediate
Unusual condition or emerging
infectious disease of potential
public health significance
24 hours
Immediate
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Added (2)
Disease
Timeframe
Community-acquired invasive
MRSA
Death from chickenpox
1 week
Death from influenza (age < 18)
1 week
Laboratories only: enterovirus,
culture confirmed, aggregate
totals
1 week to state
health dept
1 week
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Rabies (64-7-5)
• Animal bites reportable to the local health
•
•
department within 24 hours
Ferret added to list of animals that may be
quarantined.
Language added to:
– Allow humane destruction of animals other than a
domestic dog, cat or ferret, ‘especially a wild mammal
or hybrid…’
– Enable reporting of rabies post-exposure prophylaxis
to WVEDSS
19
Immunizations (64-7-6)
• Reporting requirements expanded to
persons 18 years of age and younger
• Newly reportable
– Smallpox vaccination
– Pandemic influenza vaccination
– Immunizations of adults (voluntary)
20
Disease outbreaks (64-7-7)
• Immediate notification of:
– Local health officer
– The Bureau
• Collaboration with
– The Bureau
– Other jurisdictions
– Federal public health officials
• Steps in investigation outlined
• Enabling language to complete special studies
(e.g., case-control, cohort), hold individually
identifying data confidential
21
Surveillance program evaluation
and special studies (64-7-8)
• Commissioner given the ability to do evaluation
of surveillance systems or special studies,
including:
– Right to request medical or laboratory records to
perform audits for completeness, accuracy and
timeliness of reporting
– Do special studies (e.g., case-control, cohort, crosssectional) on the health of the population for the
purpose of quantifying the risk to the population or
access to appropriate prevention and control services
– Hold data confidential
22
Bioterrorism response (64-7-9)
• Immediate notification
• Definition
• Collaboration with other local health
officers, state and federal officials, law
enforcement
• Investigation as in outbreak investigation
section
23
Syndromic surveillance and electronic
laboratory reporting (64-7-10)
• Commissioner may create a list of syndromes to
be reported:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Acute neurological illness
Acute vomiting and/or diarrhea
Death in the emergency room
Febrile illness with flu-like symptoms
Febrile illness with flu-like symptoms and rash
Pneumonia
Septicemia of unknown etiology
Other syndromes as defined by the Commissioner
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Syndromic surveillance and electronic
laboratory reporting (64-7-10)
• When certified as operational by the
Commissioner, laboratories with automatic
reporting capability will report positive
results daily, including
– Patient name, address, telephone number,
date of birth, sex
– Submitter
– Specimen source, date of collection, date of
result
– Test name, result, normal value or range
– Laboratory name, address, phone and fax
25
Syndromic surveillance and electronic
laboratory reporting (64-7-10)
• When certified … laboratories with
automatic reporting capability will report
… additional conditions including:
– Adenovirus
– Enterovirus
– Influenza
– RSV
– Rotavirus
26
Submission of Laboratory Specimens to
Office of Laboratory Services:
Isolates (12.2.b.1)
• Bacillus anthracis
• Clostridium botulinum
• Corynebacterium diphtheriae
• Tularemia
• Salmonella
• Shigella
• Campylobacter
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Submission of Laboratory Specimens to
Office of Laboratory Services:
Isolates (12.2.b.1) (2)
•
•
•
•
Listeria monocytogenes
Suspect or confirmed ETEC
Yersinia pestis
From a sterile site:
– N meningitidis
– S pneumoniae
– Haemophilus influenzae
• Other isolates as determined by the
Commissioner
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Submission of Virological, serological,
EM , molecular samples … (12.2.b.2.G)
• LaCrosse, West Nile, Eastern equine, St Louis
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
encephalitis viruses
Orthopox virus
Poliomyelitis
Rabies
Rubella
Rubeola
SARS
Other specimens as determined by the Commissioner
– Novel influenza virus
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FAQ # 1
‘I’m not sure I have jurisdiction…’
• For local health departments, jurisdiction =
– Your county
• Schools, camps, vessels and department-
operated health care facilities are required to:
– Report …. 64-7-12.3.a.1
– Assist with investigation …. 64-7-12.3.a.2
– Follow methods of control … 64-7-12.3.a.2
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FAQ # 2
‘Dr. C wants written permission
from the patient to report…’
• Pg 17: …Providers and … facilities …
shall:
– Report …. 64-7-12.1.a.1
– Assist … in … investigation 64-7-12.1.a.2
– Submit specimens … 64-7-12.1.a.3
• HIPAA letter
– http://www.wvdhhr.org/idep/PDFs/IDEP/HIPP
A_Letter_11-05.pdf
31
FAQ # 3
‘… I need to rule out this case, but
negative results aren’t reportable ….’
• … Providers and … facilities … shall
– ‘assist the … local health officer in ruling out
previously reported cases … by submitting
copies of negative laboratory tests … 16-712.1.a.7
32
FAQ # 4
‘ … Dr. B won’t help me with contact
investigation …’
• Pg 17-18: Health care providers and … facilities
… shall …
– Assist … in any necessary contact investigation … 647-12.1.a.2
– … advise … the patient … members of the patient’s
household and other patient contacts …64-7-12.1.a.4
– Follow a method of control specified by the
commissioner in established protocols … 64-712.1.a.5
– Assist … the local health officer by promoting
implementation of the control method … specified in
the protocol … 64-7-12.1.a.6
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FAQ # 5
“Dr. A won’t report.’
• If … a … provider,… facility, laboratory … failed
•
•
to report … the local health officer … shall
request an explanation …64-7-14.6
The local health officer shall report to the
commissioner the … provider, … facility,
laboratory … and his or her reason for failure to
comply … 64-7-14.7
(Call us first)
34
FAQ # 6
‘Attorney X is requesting a disease
report – can I give it to him?’
• Pg 21: … the local health officer may
release confidential information … to:
– The patient 64-7-18.2.a
– The patient’s physician …. 64-7-18.2.d
– Any individual with the written consent of the
patient and of all other individuals identified
…64-7-18.2.e
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Limitations
• Isolation and quarantine
– Operational plans require court orders
• Owned dog, cat or ferret:
– Only option: ‘… shall direct owner to confine …’
64-7.5.3
• Keeping the rule up to date … Commissioner …
– … may…add or delete a disease or condition …
64-7-3.1.a
– … may require same day reporting …
36
Strengths of the Rule
• Clear responsibilities for providers, laboratories,
health officials, schools, vessels…
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Reporting
Investigating
Outbreak investigation
Contact investigation
Surveillance evaluation and special studies
Confidentiality
Electronic reporting
37
Strengths of the Rule
• Reportable Disease Protocol Manual
– The commissioner shall establish specific protocols
…64-7-3.2.a
– … providers and … facilities … 64-7-12.1.a.5
– … laboratories …64-7-12.2.b.1
– … local health officers … 64-7-14.3.a and 64-7-14.3.b
– … schools, camps, vessels, and department-operated
health care facilities …. 64-7-12.3.a.3
38
Myth:
‘… I don’t have the authority to ...’
• 64-7-14 Responsibilities of Local Health
Officers:
– Comply with rule
– Maintain records
– Investigate/collect specimens/manage
contacts/report to BPH
• Reportable disease protocol manual
• Consultation with the Commissioner
– Investigate providers who don’t report
39
Always … advise appropriately
and document…
You (the local health officer) can
have tremendous influence
(authority) in your jurisdiction …
40
Conference Call on the Reportable
Disease Rule and WVEDSS
• WHO: Local Health Departments, Hospital
Infection Control Professionals, Hospital
Laboratory Directors
• WHEN: Wednesday, May 30 and Friday,
June 8, 2007; 12:00 to 1:30 PM
• HOW: dial 1-888-819-5079; passcode
= 586900
• CAUTION: Only 125 lines each call
41