Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 3, September 1, 2024
RELATES TO:
KRS
211.180(1),
214.010,
214.645,
215.520,
216B.015,
258.065,
258.990,
311.282,
311.571,
315.010,
333.020,
333.130
NECESSITY, FUNCTION, AND CONFORMITY:
KRS
211.180(1)(a) requires the
cabinet to implement a statewide program for the detection, prevention, and
control of communicable diseases, chronic and degenerative diseases, dental
diseases and abnormalities, occupational diseases and health hazards peculiar
to industry, home accidents and health hazards, animal diseases that are
transmissible to man, and other diseases and health hazards that can be
controlled.
KRS
214.010 requires every physician, advanced
practice registered nurse, and every head of family to notify the local health
department of the existence of diseases and conditions designated by
administrative regulation of the cabinet. This administrative regulation
establishes notification standards and specifies the diseases requiring
immediate, urgent, priority, routine, or general notification, in order to
facilitate rapid public health action to control diseases and to permit an
accurate assessment of the health status of the Commonwealth.
Section 1. Definitions.
(1) "Acid fast bacilli" or "AFB" means the
mycobacteria that, if stained, retains color even after having been washed in
an acid solution and can be detected under a microscope in a stained
smear.
(2) "Health facility" is
defined by
KRS
216B.015(13).
(3) "Health professional" means a
professional licensed under KRS Chapters 311 through 314.
(4) "Healthcare-associated infection" or
"HAI" means an infection acquired by a person while receiving treatment for a
separate condition in a health care setting.
(5) "Kentucky Public Health Advisory" means a
notification to health professionals, health facilities, and laboratories
subject to this administrative regulation identifying a new health threat that
warrants reporting through the procedures of this administrative
regulation.
(6)
"Laboratory-confirmed influenza" means influenza diagnosed through testing
performed using:
(a) Reverse transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (RT PCR);
(b) Nucleic acid detection; or
(c) Viral culture.
(7) "Medical laboratory" is defined by
KRS
333.020(3).
(8) "National Healthcare Safety Network" or
"NHSN" means the nation's most widely used healthcare-associated infection
(HAI) tracking system as provided to medical facilities by the CDC.
(9) "National reference laboratory" means a
laboratory located outside of Kentucky that is contracted by a Kentucky health
professional, laboratory, or health facility to provide laboratory
testing.
(10) "Novel influenza A
virus" means an influenza virus that causes human infection but is different
from the seasonal human influenza A virus subtypes and includes viruses
predominately of avian and swine origin.
(11) "Nucleic acid amplification test" or
"NAAT" means the laboratory test used to target and amplify a single
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) or ribonucleic acid (RNA) sequence, usually for
detecting a microorganism.
(12)
"Outbreak" means:
(a) Two (2) or more cases,
including HAIs, that are epidemiologically linked or connected by person,
place, or time; or
(b) A single
case of an HAI not commonly diagnosed.
(13) "Pharmacist" is defined by
KRS
315.010(17).
(14) "Post-exposure prophylaxis" or "PEP"
means taking an antiretroviral medicine after being potentially exposed to HIV
to prevent becoming infected.
(15)
"Pre-exposure prophylaxis" or "PrEP" means daily medicine intended to reduce
the chance of getting HIV.
(16)
"Select agent" means a biological agent or toxin that could pose a severe
threat to public health, plant health, animal product, or plant product as
determined by the National Select Agent Registry (NSAR) at
www.selectagents.go.
(17) "Veterinarian" is defined by
KRS
321.181(4).
Section 2. Notification Standards.
(1) Health professionals and facilities.
(a) A health professional or a health
facility shall give notification if:
1. The
health professional or a health facility makes a probable diagnosis of a
disease specified in Section 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12, 16, 17, 18, or 19 of this
administrative regulation; and
2.
The diagnosis is supported by:
a.
(i) Clinical or laboratory criteria;
and
(ii) Case classifications
published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention at
wwwn.cdc.gov/nndss;
or
b. A health
professional's medical opinion that the disease is
present.
(b) A
single report by a health facility of a condition diagnosed by a test result
from the health facility's laboratory shall constitute notification on behalf
of the health facility and its laboratory.
(c) A health facility may designate an
individual to report on behalf of the health facility's laboratory, pharmacy,
and the health facility's other clinical entities.
(d) Notification shall be given to the local
health department serving the county in which the patient resides.
(e) If the local health department cannot be
reached, notification shall be given to the Kentucky Department for Public
Health.
(f) The reporting health
professional or health facility shall submit:
1. Information required in Section 5(6) of
this administrative regulation; and
2. Clinical, epidemiologic, and laboratory
information pertinent to the disease including sources of specimens submitted
for laboratory testing.
(2) Medical Laboratories.
(a) A laboratory test result that indicates
infection with an agent associated with one (1) or more of the diseases or
conditions specified in Section 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12, 16, 17, 18, or 19 of this
administrative regulation shall be reported to the local health department
serving the county in which the patient resides.
(b) If the local health department cannot be
reached, notification shall be given to the Kentucky Department for Public
Health.
(c) The reporting
laboratory shall submit the information required in Section 5(6) of this
administrative regulation.
(3) National Reference Laboratories.
(a) A test result performed by a national
reference laboratory that indicates infection with an agent associated with one
(1) or more of the diseases or conditions specified in Section 3, 6, 7, 8, 9,
12, 16, 17, 18, or 19 of this administrative regulation shall be reported by
the director of a medical laboratory, a health facility, or the health
professional that referred the test to the national reference laboratory to the
local health department serving the county in which the patient
resides.
(b) If the local health
department cannot be reached, notification shall be given to the Kentucky
Department for Public Health.
(c)
The report shall include the information required by Section 5(6) of this
administrative regulation.
Section 3. Submission of Specimens to the
Kentucky Department for Public Health Division of Laboratory Services.
(1) A medical laboratory and a national
reference laboratory in receipt of diagnostic specimens originating from the
Commonwealth of Kentucky shall send direct specimens or pure clinical isolates
for diseases established in subsection (5) of this section to the Division of
Laboratory Services for primary or confirmatory testing and related
studies.
(2) A medical laboratory
or national reference laboratory using non-culture techniques to identify
bacterial agents of diarrheal disease, such as enzyme immunoassays (EIAs) or
molecular assays, shall attempt isolation of the etiologic agent identified.
Pure clinical isolates shall be submitted to the Division of Laboratory
Services.
(3) If the culture
attempts do not produce a clinical isolate, the direct specimen, submitted in
the appropriate preservative, shall be sent to the Division of Laboratory
Services. A submitting laboratory shall provide the name of the etiologic agent
detected by the non-culture technique at the time of specimen
submission.
(4) A medical
laboratory performing this test shall continue to follow the state's
requirement for the submission of appropriate materials to the state public
health laboratory.
(5) A medical or
national reference laboratory shall submit pure isolates or, if not available,
the direct specimen from the following diseases to the Division of Laboratory
Services:
(a) Botulism, with prior approval
from the Division of Epidemiology for testing;
(b) Brucellosis;
(c) Campylobacteriosis;
(d) Candida auris;
(e) Carbapenem-resistant
Acinetobacter;
(f)
Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae;
(g) Carbapenem-resistant
Pseudomonas;
(h) Cholera and
diseases caused by other Vibrio species;
(i) Diphtheria;
(j) Escherichia coli O157:H7;
(k) Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS) - Post
Diarrheal;
(l)
Listeriosis;
(m) Measles;
(n) Meningococcal infections;
(o) Rabies, animal;
(p) Rubella;
(q) Salmonellosis;
(r) Shiga toxin-producing E. coli
(STEC);
(s) Shigellosis;
(t) Tuberculosis;
(u) Tularemia;
(v) Typhoid fever;
(w) Vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus
aureus;
(x) Vancomycin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus; and
(y)
Zika, with prior approval from the Division of Epidemiology for
testing.
(6) All direct
specimens or clinical isolates from enteric disease shall be submitted within
seventy-two (72) hours from collection.
Section 4. Laboratory Testing and Submission
of Specimens to the Division of Laboratory Services for the Identification of
M. tuberculosis.
(1) For the identification of
M. tuberculosis, a medical laboratory or national reference laboratory shall
perform AFB smear and culture, regardless of rapid molecular testing results (
NAAT).
(2) Rapid molecular testing
shall be performed for the identification of M. tuberculosis on:
(a) Any diagnostic specimen with an AFB smear
positive result; or
(b) Any
specimen that originates from an individual with clinical or epidemiological
evidence suggesting active tuberculosis.
(3) If rapid molecular testing cannot be
performed by the medical laboratory or national reference laboratory, the
diagnostic specimen shall be sent to the Division of Laboratory
Services.
(4) A medical laboratory
or national reference laboratory that has a diagnostic specimen test positive
for M. tuberculosis by rapid molecular testing shall send the remainder of that
specimen to the Division of Laboratory Services.
(5) Any diagnostic specimen found to be
positive for M. tuberculosis by rapid molecular testing or culture testing
shall be reported in accordance with Section 7 of this administrative
regulation.
Section 5.
Reporting Classifications and Methods.
(1)
Immediate reporting.
(a) A report required by
Section 12(1) and (2) of this administrative regulation to be made immediately
shall be:
1. Made by telephone to the local
health department serving the county in which the patient resides;
and
2. Followed up by electronic or
fax submission to the local health department serving the county in which the
patient resides within one (1) business day.
(b) Upon receipt of a report for a disease
requiring immediate reporting, the local health department shall:
1. Notify the Kentucky Department for Public
Health by telephone; and
2. Assist
the department in carrying out a public health response.
(c) Weekend, evening, or holiday immediate
notification. If local health department personnel cannot be contacted
directly, notification shall be made by telephone using an emergency number
provided by the local health department or the Kentucky Department for Public
Health.
(d) For the protection of
patient confidentiality, a report using the emergency number shall include:
1. The name of the condition being reported;
and
2. A telephone number that can
be used by the department to contact the reporting health professional or
health facility.
(2) Urgent reporting.
(a) A report made within twenty-four (24)
hours as required by Section 6 of this administrative regulation shall be:
1. Submitted electronically, by fax, or by
telephone to the local health department serving the county in which the
patient resides; and
2. If
submitted by telephone, followed up by electronic or fax submission to the
local health department serving the county in which the patient resides within
one (1) business day.
(b)
Upon receipt of a report for a disease requiring urgent reporting, the local
health department shall:
1. Notify the
Kentucky Department for Public Health; and
2. Assist the department in carrying out a
public health response.
(c) Weekend, evening, or holiday urgent
notification. If local health department personnel cannot be contacted
directly, notification shall be made by telephone using an emergency number
provided by the local health department or the Kentucky Department for Public
Health.
(d) For the protection of
patient confidentiality, notification using the emergency number shall include:
1. The name of the condition being reported;
and
2. A telephone number that can
be used by the department to contact the reporting health professional or
health facility.
(3) Priority reporting.
(a) A report made within one (1) business day
as required by Section 7, 11, 12(3), 17(4), or 18 of this administrative
regulation shall be:
1. Submitted
electronically, by fax, or by telephone to the local health department serving
the county in which the patient resides; and
2. If submitted by telephone, followed up by
electronic or fax submission of a report to the local health department serving
the county in which the patient resides within one (1) business day.
(b) Upon receipt of a report for a
disease requiring priority reporting, a local health department shall:
1. Investigate the report and carry out
public health protection measures; and
2. Notify the Kentucky Department for Public
Health of the case by electronic or fax submission within one (1) business
day.
(c) The reporting
health department may seek assistance in carrying out public health measures
from the Kentucky Department for Public Health.
(4) Routine reporting.
(a) A report made within five (5) business
days, as required by Section 8, 9, 10, 13(1), 16(1), 17(7), or 20(1) of this
administrative regulation, shall be made electronically, by fax, or by mail to
the local health department serving the county in which the patient
resides.
(b) Upon receipt of a
report of a disease or condition requiring routine reporting, a local health
department shall:
1. Make a record of the
report;
2. Answer inquiries or
render assistance regarding the report if requested by the reporting entity;
and
3. Forward the report to the
Kentucky Department for Public Health by electronic or fax submission of a
report, or in writing within five (5) business days.
(5) General reporting. A report
made within three (3) months, as required by Section 19 of this administrative
regulation, shall be made electronically, by fax, or by mail.
(6) Reporting requirements.
(a) A report submitted by fax or by mail
shall be made using one (1) of the following reporting forms:
1. EPID 200, Kentucky Reportable Disease
Form;
2. EPID 250, Kentucky
Reportable MDRO Form, to be used for priority reporting;
3. EPID 394, Kentucky Reportable Disease
Form, Hepatitis Infection in Pregnant Women or Child (aged five (5) years or
less);
4. EPID 399, Perinatal
Hepatitis B Prevention Form for Infants;
5. Adult HIV Confidential Case Report Form;
or
6. Pediatric HIV Confidential
Case Report Form.
(b)
Information to be reported. Except as provided in subsections (1)(d) and (2)(d)
of this section, a report required by this administrative regulation shall
include:
1. Patient name;
2. Date of birth;
3. Gender;
4. Race;
5. Ethnicity;
6. Patient address;
7. County of residence;
8. Patient telephone number;
9. Name of the reporting medical provider or
facility;
10. Address of the
reporting medical provider or facility; and
11. Telephone number of the reporting medical
provider or facility.
(c)
A reporting health professional shall submit the information listed in this
subsection and Section 2(1)(f) of this administrative
regulation.
Section
6. Notifiable Infectious Conditions Requiring Urgent Notification.
(1) Notification of the following diseases
shall be considered urgent and shall be made within twenty-four (24) hours:
(a) Anthrax;
(b) Botulism;
(c) Brucellosis (multiple cases, temporally
or spatially clustered);
(d)
Diphtheria;
(e) Hepatitis A,
acute;
(f) Measles;
(g) Meningococcal infections;
(h) Middle East Respiratory
Syndrome-associated Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) disease;
(i) Multi-system Inflammatory Syndrome in
Children (MIS-C);
(j) Novel
influenza A virus infections;
(k)
Plague;
(l)
Poliomyelitis;
(m) Rabies,
animal;
(n) Rabies, human;
(o) Rubella;
(p) Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome-associated Coronavirus (SARS-CoV) disease;
(q) Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) (the virus that causes COVID-19);
(r) Smallpox;
(s) Tularemia;
(t)
Viral hemorrhagic fevers due to:
1.
Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever virus;
2. Ebola virus;
3. Lassa virus;
4. Lujo virus;
5. Marburg virus; or
6. New world arenaviruses including:
a. Guanarito virus;
b. Junin virus;
c. Machupo virus; and
d. Sabia virus;
and
(u) Yellow
fever.
(2) To track the
spread of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the
virus that causes COVID-19, notification of testing results shall include both
positive and negative test results.
Section 7. Notifiable Infectious Conditions
and Notifiable Non-Infectious Conditions Requiring Priority Notification.
Notification of the following diseases or conditions shall be considered
priority and shall be made within one (1) business day:
(1) Arboviral diseases, neuroinvasive and
non-neuroinvasive, including:
(a) California
serogroup virus diseases, including diseases caused by:
1. California encephalitis virus;
2. Jamestown Canyon virus;
3. Keystone virus;
4. La Crosse virus;
5. Snowshoe hare virus; and
6. Trivittatus viruses;
(b) Chikungunya virus disease;
(c) Eastern equine encephalitis virus
disease;
(d) Powassan virus
disease;
(e) St. Louis encephalitis
virus disease;
(f) Venezuelan
equine encephalitis disease;
(g)
West Nile virus disease;
(h)
Western equine encephalitis virus disease; and
(i) Zika virus disease or infection or the
birth of a child to a mother who was Zika-positive or Zika-inconclusive during
any stage of pregnancy or during the periconceptional period;
(2) Brucellosis (cases not
temporally or spatially clustered);
(3) Campylobacteriosis;
(4) Carbon monoxide poisoning;
(5) Cholera;
(6) Cryptosporidiosis;
(7) Cyclosporiasis;
(8) Dengue virus infections;
(9) Escherichia coli O157:H7;
(10) Foodborne disease outbreak;
(11) Giardiasis;
(12) Haemophilus influenzae invasive
disease;
(13) Hansen's disease
(leprosy);
(14) Hantavirus
infection, non-Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome;
(15) Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome
(HPS);
(16) Hemolytic uremic
syndrome (HUS), post-diarrheal;
(17) Hepatitis B, acute;
(18) Hepatitis B infection in a pregnant
woman;
(19) Hepatitis B infection
in an infant or a child aged five (5) years or less;
(20) Newborns born to Hepatitis B positive
mothers at the time of delivery;
(21) Influenza-associated
mortality;
(22)
Legionellosis;
(23)
Leptospirosis;
(24)
Listeriosis;
(25) Mumps;
(26) Norovirus outbreak;
(27) Pertussis;
(28) Pesticide-related illness,
acute;
(29) Psittacosis;
(30) Q fever;
(31) Rubella, congenital syndrome;
(32) Salmonellosis;
(33) Shiga toxin-producing E. coli
(STEC);
(34) Shigellosis;
(35) Streptococcal toxic-shock
syndrome;
(36) Streptococcus
pneumoniae, invasive disease;
(37)
Tetanus;
(38) Toxic-shock syndrome
(other than Streptococcal);
(39)
Tuberculosis;
(40) Typhoid
fever;
(41) Varicella;
(42) Vibriosis; and
(43) Waterborne disease outbreak.
Section 8. Notifiable Infectious
Conditions and Notifiable Non-Infectious Conditions Requiring Routine
Notification. Notification of the following diseases shall be considered
routine and shall be made within five (5) business days:
(1) Acute Flaccid Myelitis;
(2) Anaplasmosis;
(3) Babesiosis;
(4) Coccidioidomycosis;
(5) Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease;
(6) Ehrlichiosis;
(7) Hepatitis C, acute;
(8) Hepatitis C infection in a pregnant
woman;
(9) Hepatitis C infection in
an infant or a child aged five (5) years or less;
(10) Newborns born to Hepatitis C positive
mothers at the time of delivery;
(11) Histoplasmosis;
(12) Laboratory-confirmed
influenza;
(13) Lead
poisoning;
(14) Lyme
Disease;
(15) Malaria;
(16) Spotted Fever Rickettsiosis (Rocky
Mountain Spotted Fever);
(17)
Toxoplasmosis; and
(18)
Trichinellosis (Trichinosis).
Section
9. Notifiable Infectious Conditions Requiring Routine Notification
by Electronic Laboratory Reporting.
(1)
Notification of the following shall be considered routine and shall be
electronically reported to the Kentucky Department for Public Health through
the Kentucky Health Information Exchange within five (5) business days:
(a) Hepatitis B laboratory test results,
which shall:
1. Be reported as positive or
negative; and
2. Include the serum
bilirubin levels or serum alanine aminotransferase taken within ten (10) days
of the test of a patient who has tested positive;
(b) Hepatitis C laboratory test results,
which shall:
1. Be reported as positive or
negative; and
2. Include the serum
bilirubin levels or serum alanine aminotransferase taken within ten (10) days
of the test of a patient who has tested positive; or
(c) Varicella laboratory test results
reported as positive for:
1. Isolation of
varicella virus from a clinical specimen;
2. Varicella antigen detected by direct
fluorescent antibody test; or
3.
Varicella-specific nucleic acid detected by polymerase chain reaction
(PCR).
(2)
Reports made pursuant to this section shall include a
diagnosis.
Section 10.
Multi-Drug Resistant Organisms and Other Organisms Requiring Routine
Notification by Electronic Laboratory Reporting.
(1) Notification of the following diseases
shall be considered routine and shall be electronically reported to the
Kentucky Department for Public Health through the Kentucky Health Information
Exchange within five (5) business days:
(a)
Clostridioides (formerly Clostridium) difficile (C. difficile) identified from
a positive laboratory test result for C. difficile toxin A or B (includes
molecular assays {PCR} or toxin assays) or a toxin-producing organism detected
by culture or other laboratory means performed on a stool sample;
(b) Enterobacteriaceae species resistant to
ceftazidime, ceftriaxone, or cefotaxime;
(c) Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA), which includes S. aureus cultured from any specimen that tests
oxacillin-resistant, cefoxitin-resistant, or methicillin-resistant by standard
susceptibility testing methods, or by a laboratory test that is FDA-approved
for MRSA detection from isolated colonies. These methods may also include a
positive result by any FDA-approved test for MRSA detection; and
(d) Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus species
(VRE), only those identified to the species level, that are resistant to
Vancomycin by standard susceptibility testing methods or by results from any
FDA-approved test for VRE detection from specific specimen sources.
(2) The report of an organism
under this section shall include the:
(a) Date
of specimen collection;
(b) Source
of specimen;
(c) Susceptibility
pattern; and
(d) Name of the
ordering health professional.
(3) Upon a test result performed by a medical
laboratory that indicates infection with an agent associated with one (1) or
more of the diseases or conditions or a multi-drug resistant organism specified
in this section, the director of the medical laboratory shall electronically
report the result to the Kentucky Department for Public Health through the
Kentucky Health Information Exchange within five (5) days.
(4) The report shall include a
diagnosis.
Section 11.
Multi-drug Resistant Organisms and Other Organisms Requiring Priority Reporting
by EPID 250 and by Electronic Laboratory Reporting to the Kentucky Department
for Public Health through the Kentucky Health Information Exchange within One
(1) Business Day. Notification of the following diseases shall be considered
priority:
(1) Candida auris - Laboratory
Criteria for Diagnosis shall include:
(a)
Confirmatory laboratory evidence for detection of Candida auris from any body
site using either culture or a culture independent diagnostic test (for
example, Polymerase Chain Reaction {PCR}); or
(b) Presumptive laboratory evidence for
detection of Candida haemulonii from any body site using a yeast identification
method that is not able to detect Candida auris, and either the isolate or
specimen is not available for further testing, or the isolate or specimen has
not yet undergone further testing;
(2) Carbapenem-resistant - Acinetobacter -
Any Acinetobacter species testing resistant to imipenem, meropenem, or
doripenem, with MIC value greater than or equal to eight (8) ng/mL by standard
susceptibility testing methods, or by identification of a carbapenemase using a
recognized test;
(3)
Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) - Any Enterobacteriaceae species
testing resistant to imipenem, meropenem, or doripenem, with MIC value greater
than or equal to four (4) ng/mL, or ertapenem with MIC value greater than or
equal to two (2) ng/mL, by standard susceptibility testing methods, or by
identification of a carbapenemase using a recognized test;
(4) Carbapenem-resistant - Pseudomonas - Any
Pseudomonas species testing resistant to imipenem, meropenem, or doripenem,
with MIC value greater than or equal to eight (8) ng/mL by standard
susceptibility testing methods, or by identification of a carbapenemase using a
recognized test;
(5)
Vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (VISA), which includes S. aureus
cultured from any specimen having a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of
four (4) to eight (8) ng/mL for vancomycin per standard laboratory methods;
and
(6) Vancomycin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA), which includes S. aureus cultured from any
specimen having a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of greater than or
equal to sixteen (16) ng/mL for vancomycin per standard laboratory
methods.
Section 12.
Newly Recognized Infectious Agents, HAI Outbreaks, Emerging Pathogens, and
Pathogens of Public Health Importance.
(1) The
following shall be reported immediately by telephone to the Kentucky Department
for Public Health:
(a) A suspected incidence
of bioterrorism caused by a biological agent;
(b) Submission of a specimen to the Kentucky
Division of Laboratory Services for select agent identification or select agent
confirmation testing; or
(c) An
outbreak of a disease or condition that resulted in multiple hospitalizations
or death.
(2) An
unexpected pattern of cases, suspected cases, or deaths that could indicate the
following shall be reported immediately by telephone to the local health
department in the county where the health professional is practicing or where
the facility is located:
(a) A
newly-recognized infectious agent;
(b) An outbreak;
(c) An emerging pathogen that may pose a
danger to the health of the public;
(d) An epidemic; or
(e) A noninfectious chemical, biological, or
radiological agent.
(3) A
report of the following shall be considered priority and shall be reported to
the local health department in the county where the health professional is
practicing or where the facility is located within one (1) business day:
(a) Suspected Staphylococcal or other
foodborne intoxication; or
(b)
Salmonellosis or other foodborne or waterborne infection.
(4) The local health department shall:
(a) Investigate the outbreak or
occurrence;
(b) Carry out public
health protection measures to address the disease or condition involved;
and
(c) Make medical and
environmental recommendations to prevent future similar outbreaks or
occurrences.
(5) The
local health department may seek assistance from the Kentucky Department for
Public Health.
Section
13. Laboratory Surveillance.
(1)
Medical or national reference laboratory results for the following shall be
considered routine:
(a) Influenza virus
isolates;
(b) PCR-positive test
results for influenza virus; and
(c) DNA molecular assays for influenza
virus.
(2) The report
shall include specific laboratory information pertinent to the
result.
(3) Upon request by the
Kentucky Department for Public Health, a health facility laboratory or a
medical laboratory shall report the number of clinical isolates and information
regarding the antimicrobial resistance patterns of the clinical isolates at
intervals no less frequently than three (3) months for:
(a) Acinetobacter baumannii
complex;
(b) Enterobacter cloacae
complex;
(c) Enterococcus
species;
(d) Escherichia
coli;
(e) Klebsiella
oxytoca;
(f) Klebsiella
pneumoniae;
(g) Pseudomonas
aeruginosa;
(h) Staphylococcus
aureus; or
(i) An organism specified
in a request that includes a justification of its public health
importance.
(4) A
facility that reports antimicrobial resistance (AR) data to the National
Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) AUR (Antimicrobial Use & Resistance)
module shall meet this reporting requirement through NHSN reporting.
Section 14. Healthcare-Associated
Infection Surveillance.
(1) A health facility
in Kentucky that participates in CMS reporting programs shall authorize the CDC
to allow the Kentucky Department for Public Health to access health
care-associated infection data reported to NHSN.
(2) The Kentucky Department for Public Health
shall preserve patient confidentiality and shall not disclose to the public any
patient-level data obtained from any health care facility.
(3) The Kentucky Department for Public Health
may issue reports to the public regarding healthcare-associated infections in
aggregate data form that:
(a) May identify
individual health care facilities; and
(b) Shall comply with methodology developed
by the CDC and CMS for national reporting of health care-associated
infections.
(4) The
Kentucky Department for Public Health may evaluate healthcare-associated
infection data for accuracy and completeness.
Section 15. Antimicrobial Use Reporting.
(1) A short-term acute-care hospital in
Kentucky that participates in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS) reporting programs shall report data on facility-wide inpatient
antimicrobial use to the Kentucky Department for Public Health,
Healthcare-Associated Infection/Antibiotic Resistance (HAI/AR) Prevention
Program, on a quarterly basis, effective January 1, 2021. Critical access
hospitals shall be exempt.
(2)
Reporting deadlines shall be consistent with the CMS reporting program
submission deadlines of data to the NHSN.
(3) The HAI/AR Prevention Program shall
provide the specifications for data submission.
(4) Hospitals shall include aggregated
antimicrobial use and patient day data for all inpatient units ( facility-wide
inpatient) included in the NHSN Laboratory-identified (LabID) MRSA Bacte-remia
reporting.
(5) The antimicrobial
use numerator shall be days of therapy (DOTs) as defined by the NHSN
Antimicrobial Use and Resistance (AUR) Module, available at //
www.cdc.gov/nhsn/pdfs/pscmanual/11pscaurcurrent.pdf.
(6) Total DOTs shall be submitted for each of
the following antimicrobials:
(a)
Azithromycin;
(b)
Cefepime;
(c)
Ceftazidime;
(d)
Ceftriaxone;
(e)
Ciprofloxacin;
(f)
Clindamycin;
(g) Daptomycin;
(h) Ertapenem;
(i) Imipenem;
(j) Levofloxacin;
(k)
Linezolid;
(l)
Meropenem;
(m)
Moxifloxacin;
(n)
Piperacillin-tazobactam; and
(o)
Vancomycin.
(7) Total
DOTs for the listed drugs shall include only administrations via the
intravenous and digestive tract routes.
(8) The denominator for antimicrobial use
reporting shall be patient days as defined by the NHSN LabID Module available
at
https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/pdfs/pscmanual/12pscmdro_cdadcurrent.pdf.
(9) A hospital that reports antimicrobial use
data to the NHSN AUR Module shall meet this reporting requirement through NHSN
reporting.
Section 16.
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
(AIDS) Surveillance.
(1) All case reports
shall be submitted to the HIV/AIDS Surveillance Program of the Kentucky
Department for Public Health, Division of Epidemiology and Health Planning, or
its designee, within five (5) business days of diagnosis on one (1) of the
following forms:
(a) Adult HIV Confidential
Case Report Form; or
(b) Pediatric
HIV Confidential Case Report Form.
(2) Health professionals and medical
laboratories shall report:
(a) A positive
test result for HIV infection including a result from:
1. 3rd generation immunoassay;
2. 4th generation immunoassay;
3. Western Blot;
4. PCR;
5. HIV-1 or HIV-2 differentiating such as
Multispot;
6. HIV
antigen;
7. HIV antibody;
8. CD4+ assay including absolute CD4+ cell
counts and CD4+%;
9. HIV Viral Load
Assay including detectable and undetectable values;
10. HIV genetic sequencing; or
11. A positive confirmatory serologic test
result for HIV infection; or
(b) A diagnosis of AIDS that meets the
definition of AIDS established within the CDC guidelines.
(3) The most recent negative HIV test, if
available, shall be submitted with the report required by subsection (2)(a) or
(b) of this section.
(4) Any
request for data related to HIV infection or AIDS shall be made to the
Department for Public Health, Division of Epidemiology and Health
Planning.
(5) A case report for a
person with an HIV infection without a diagnosis of AIDS, or HIV infection with
a diagnosis of AIDS shall include:
(a) The
patient's full name;
(b) The
patient's complete address;
(c)
Date of birth using the format MMDDYYYY;
(d) Gender;
(e) Race;
(f) Ethnicity;
(g) Risk factor as identified by CDC;
(h) County of
residence;
(i) Name of provider and
facility submitting report including contact information;
(j) Specimen collected;
(k) Date and type of HIV test performed using
the format MMDDYYYY;
(l) Results of
CD4+ cell counts and CD4+%;
(m)
Results of viral load testing;
(n)
Results of PCR, HIV culture, HIV antigen, and HIV antibody, if
performed;
(o) Results of TB
testing, if available;
(p) Any
documented HIV negative test, if available;
(q) History of PrEP or PEP treatment, if
available;
(r) Antiretroviral
treatment, if available;
(s) HIV
status of the person's partner, spouse, or children, as applicable;
(t) Opportunistic infections diagnosed;
and
(u) Date of onset of
illness.
(6) A report of
AIDS shall be made whether or not the patient has been previously reported as
having an HIV infection.
(7) If the
patient has not been previously reported as having an HIV infection, the AIDS
report shall also serve as the report of HIV infection.
Section 17. Sexually Transmitted Disease
(STD).
(1) Notification of a probable
diagnosis of an STD as specified in subsection (4) or (7) of this section shall
be made.
(2) The report shall
provide:
(a) Pregnancy status; and
(b) Clinical, epidemiologic, laboratory, and
treatment information pertinent to the disease.
(3) Upon a laboratory test result that
indicates infection with an agent associated with one (1) or more of the
diseases or conditions specified in subsection (4) or (7) of this section, a
medical laboratory shall report to the Kentucky Department for Public Health
information required by Section 5(6)(b) of this administrative
regulation.
(4) Sexually
Transmitted Diseases Requiring Priority Notification. A report of the following
shall be considered priority and shall be made within one (1) business day:
(a) Each pregnant female who has tested
positive for syphilis regardless of stage; or
(b) Syphilis - primary, secondary, or early
latent.
(5) Upon receipt
of a report for a disease or condition specified in subsection (4) of this
section, a local health department shall:
(a)
Investigate the report;
(b) Carry
out public health protection measures to address the disease or condition;
and
(c) Forward the report to the
Kentucky Department for Public Health within one (1) business day.
(6) The local health department
may seek assistance from the Kentucky Department for Public Health.
(7) Sexually Transmitted Diseases Requiring
Routine Notification. A report of the following shall be considered routine and
shall be made within five (5) business days:
(a) Chancroid;
(b) Chlamydia trachomatis
infection;
(c) Gonorrhea;
(d) Granuloma inguinale;
(e) Lymphogranuloma venereum; or
(f) Syphilis, other than primary, secondary,
early latent, or congenital.
(8) Upon receipt of a report for a disease or
condition specified in subsection (7) of this section, a local health
department shall:
(a) Make a record of the
report using Form EPID 200, Kentucky Reportable Disease Form;
(b) Forward the report to the Kentucky
Department for Public Health within five (5) business days; and
(c) Render assistance if requested by the
reporting entity or the Kentucky Department for Public Health.
Section 18.
Tuberculosis.
(1) A pharmacist shall give
notice if two (2) or more of the following medications used for the initial
treatment of active tuberculosis are dispensed to an inpa-tient in a health
facility or to an ambulatory patient in a health facility or a pharmacy:
(a) Ethambutol;
(b) Isoniazid;
(c) Pyrazinamide; and
(d) Rifampin or rifabutin.
(2)
(a) A report of tuberculosis shall be
considered priority and shall be reported to the local health department
serving the county in which the patient resides.
(b) If the local health department cannot be
reached, notification shall be given to the Kentucky Department for Public
Health.
(3) The report
shall include:
(a) Information required in
Section 5(6)(b) of this administrative regulation; and
(b) Names of the medications
dispensed.
Section
19. Asbestosis, Coal Worker's Pneumoconiosis, and Silicosis.
(1) A health professional shall report a
diagnosis of the following to the Kentucky Department for Public Health within
three (3) months of diagnosis:
(a)
Asbestosis;
(b) Coal worker's
pneumoconiosis; or
(c)
Silicosis.
(2) A report
required under this section shall include the information required in Section
5(6)(b).
Section 20.
Reporting of Communicable Diseases in Animals.
(1) A diagnosis in an animal of a condition
known to be communicable to humans, except for rabies, shall require routine
notification.
(2) A veterinarian
shall report the diagnosis within five (5) business days to the local health
department serving the county in which the animal is located.
(3) If a laboratory test indicates infection
of an animal with an agent associated with a condition known to be communicable
to humans, the director of a medical laboratory shall report the result to the
local health department serving the county in which the animal is located
within five (5) business days.
(4)
The local health department receiving the report shall:
(a) Investigate the report;
(b) Carry out public health protection
measures for the control of communicable diseases; and
(c) Forward the report to the Kentucky
Department for Public Health within five (5) business days.
(5) The local health department
may seek assistance from the Kentucky Department for Public Health.
Section 21. Kentucky Public Health
Advisory.
(1) If the Secretary of the Cabinet
for Health and Family Services or the Commissioner of the Department for Public
Health determines that a disease not presently listed in this administrative
regulation requires reporting, the secretary or commissioner shall issue a
Kentucky Public Health Advisory.
(2) The Kentucky Public Health Advisory shall
include:
(a) Date and time the advisory is
issued;
(b) A unique number to
identify the advisory;
(c) Names
for the disease or condition;
(d) A
description of the disease or condition;
(e) Recommendations for health professionals,
health facilities, and laboratories; and
(f) Notification requirements including:
1. The notification time interval;
and
2. Methods for
notification.
(3) The duty to report by health
professionals, health facilities, and laboratories pursuant to a Kentucky
Public Health Advisory shall begin upon receipt of the advisory and shall
remain in effect until the advisory is rescinded by order of the secretary or
the commissioner.
Section
22. Penalty. If the cabinet has cause to believe that a physician
willfully neglects or refuses to notify the cabinet in accordance with this
administrative regulation, pursuant to
KRS
214.990(1) the cabinet shall
make a referral to the appropriate professional licensing board.
Section 23. Incorporation by Reference.
(1) The following material is incorporated by
reference:
(a) "EPID 200, Kentucky Reportable
Disease Form", 4/2020;
(b) "EPID
250, Kentucky Reportable MDRO Form", 10/2000;
(c) "EPID 394, Kentucky Reportable Disease
Form, Hepatitis Infection in Pregnant Women or Child (aged five (5) years or
less)", 9/2020;
(d) "EPID 399,
Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Form for Infants", 6/2020;
(e) "Adult HIV Confidential Case Report
Form", 11/2019; and
(f) "Pediatric
HIV Confidential Case Report Form", 11/2019.
(2) This material may be inspected, copied,
or obtained, subject to applicable copyright law, at the Department for Public
Health, 275 East Main Street, Frankfort, Kentucky 40621, Monday through Friday,
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
STATUTORY AUTHORITY:
KRS
194A.050,
211.090(3),
211.180(1)(a),
214.010