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Communicable Disease Intervention Protocol

About this dataset:

When someone is diagnosed with a communicable disease, such as tuberculosis, HIV or another sexually transmitted disease, a health department may be required or permitted by law to take action to prevent the further spread of the disease. In some cases, this can include reporting the case to a local health department and notifying, testing and treating individuals who may have come into contact with the patient who was initially diagnosed.

This dataset provides information about the state laws and regulations that dictate how and to what extent a health department may intervene when communicable diseases appear in their jurisdiction. This dataset identifies whether a health department may act on the suspicion of a communicable disease case, or whether they must have evidence, such as an official diagnosis from a doctor or other health care provider. The data also identify whether the state or local health department is required to act, and what actions they are permitted to take when intervening. The data include laws and regulations in all 50 US states and the District of Columbia as of July 1, 2013.

Cited By

Impact of Safety Practices on Laboratory-Acquired Infections in Clinical Laboratories From 2018 to 2023

Walden University ProQuest Dissertations & These
Impact of Safety Practices on Laboratory-Acquired Infections in Clinical Laboratories From 2018 to 2023
Lori Bane
Off
Bane

Dataset Created by
Center for Public Health Law Research

Dataset Maintained by
Center for Public Health Law Research

Dataset Valid From
July 1, 2013

Dataset Updated Through
July 1, 2013

Total Jurisdictions Covered
51

Collection
None

Contact
LawAtlas@temple.edu

Publication Year
2020

Cite this dataset

Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research (2013, July 1). Communicable Disease Intervention Protocol. LawAtlas.org. https://doi.org/10.60541/cm91-ex61

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