Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Purpose. This
section implements the Texas Occupational Conditions Reporting Act, Health and
Safety Code, Chapter 84, which authorizes the Executive Commissioner of the
Health and Human Services Commission to adopt rules concerning the reporting
and control of occupational conditions.
(b) Definitions. The following words and
terms, when used in these sections, shall have the following meanings unless
the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1)
Case--A person in whom an occupational condition is diagnosed by a physician or
other health professional acting within the scope of the professional license,
based upon clinical evaluation, interpretation of laboratory and/or
roentgenographic findings, and an appropriate occupational history.
(2) Commissioner--The commissioner of
health.
(3) Department--The
Department of State Health Services, 1100 West 49th Street, Austin, Texas
78756.
(4) Local health
authority--The chief administrative officer of a public health district or a
local health department, or the physician who is to administer state and local
laws relating to public health.
(5)
Occupational conditions--Those diseases, abnormal health conditions or
laboratory findings that are caused by or are related to exposures in the
workplace.
(6) Reportable
occupational condition--Any occupational disease, condition or laboratory
finding for which an official report is required. See subsection (d) of this
section.
(7) Report of occupational
condition--The notification to the appropriate authority of the occurrence of a
specific occupational disease in a human, including all information required by
the procedures established by this rule.
(8) Suspected case--A case in which an
occupational condition is suspected, but the final diagnosis is not yet
made.
(c) Reporting
requirements.
(1) It is the duty of every
physician or health professional holding a license to practice in the State of
Texas to report promptly to the local health authority each patient she or he
shall examine and who has or is suspected of having any reportable occupational
condition. The local health authority may authorize a staff member to transmit
reports.
(2) It is the duty of
every person who is in charge of a clinical or hospital laboratory, blood bank,
mobile unit, or other facility in which a laboratory examination of any
specimen derived from a human body yields microscopical, cultural, serological,
chemical, or other evidence suggestive of a reportable condition to report
promptly that information to the local health authority.
(3) The reporting physician, health
professional, or laboratory director shall make the report in writing. A local
health authority may authorize one or more employees under his or her
supervision to receive the report from the physician, health professional, or
laboratory director by telephone; use of this alternative, if authorized, is at
the option of the reporter. The local health authority shall implement a method
of verifying the identity of the telephone caller when that person is
unfamiliar to the employee.
(4) The
local health authority shall collect the reports and transmit the information
at weekly intervals to the Environmental and Injury Epidemiology and Toxicology
Unit, Environmental Epidemiology and Disease Registries Section, Department of
State Health Services, Mail Code 1964, P.O. Box 149347, Austin, Texas,
78714-9347. Transmission may be made by mail or electronic transfer.
(A) If by mail the reports shall be placed in
a sealed envelope addressed to the attention of the Environmental and Injury
Epidemiology and Toxicology Unit, Environmental Epidemiology and Disease
Registries Section, Department of State Health Services, Mail Code 1964, P.O.
Box 149347, Austin, Texas, 78714-9347, and marked "Confidential Medical
Records."
(B) If by electronic
transmission, including facsimile transmission by telephone, it shall be in a
manner and form authorized by the commissioner or his or her designee in each
instance. Any electronic transmission of the reports must provide at least the
same degree of protection against unauthorized disclosure as those of mail
transmission. The commissioner or his or her designee shall, before authorizing
such transmission, establish guidelines for establishing and conducting such
transmission.
(5) When
an occupational condition is reported to a local health authority, and the
person diagnosed as having the condition resides outside his or her area of
local health jurisdiction, the local health authority receiving the report
shall notify the appropriate local health authority where the person or persons
reside. The department shall assist the local health authority in providing
such notifications if requested.
(d) Reportable conditions and information to
be reported.
(1) The reportable occupational
conditions are: asbestosis, silicosis, blood lead levels in persons 15 years of
age or older, and acute pesticide poisoning.
(2) Reports for asbestosis and silicosis
shall include all information collected by the reporting person and required to
complete the most recent version of the department's Asbestosis and Silicosis
Case Report Form F09-11626.
(3)
Reports for blood lead levels in persons 15 years of age and older shall
include all information collected by the reporting person and required to
complete the most recent version of the department's Adult Blood Lead Report
Form F09-11624.
(4) Reports for
acute pesticide poisoning shall include all information collected by the
reporting person and required to complete the most recent version of the
department's Pesticide Poisoning Report Form EF09-11927.
(e) General control measures for reportable
occupational conditions. The commissioner or his or her duly authorized
representative shall, as circumstances may require, proceed as follows:
(1) investigation shall be made for the
purpose of verifying the diagnosis, ascertaining the source of the causative
agent, obtaining an occupational and employment history and discovering
unreported cases;
(2) collection of
specimens of the body tissues, fluids, or discharges and of materials directly
or indirectly associated with the case, as may be necessary in confirmation of
the diagnosis, and their submission to a laboratory for examination;
(3) obtaining samples of air or materials
from the current or former business or place of employment of a case, as may be
necessary to ascertain if a public health hazard exists. If a hazard is found
the commissioner or his/her designee shall make appropriate recommendations
concerning the hazard.
(f) Confidential nature of case reporting.
(1) All case reports received by the local
health authority or the Department of State Health Services are confidential
records and not public records. These records will be held in a secure location
and accessed only by authorized personnel.
(2) The department may use information
obtained from reports or health records for statistical and epidemiological
studies which may be public information as long as an individual is not
identifiable.