Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 19, § 20-20.010
Definitions Relating to Communicable, Environmental and Occupational Diseases
Effective Apr 30, 1996sections 192.006.1., 192.020 and 260.203, RSMo (1994).* This rule was previously filed as 13 CSR 50-101.010. Original rule filed July 15, 1948, effective Sept. 13, 1948. Rescinded and readopted: Filed Dec. 11, 1981, effective May 13, 1982. Amended: Filed Aug. 16, 1988, effective Dec. 29, 1988. Amended: Filed Aug. 14, 1992, effective April 8, 1993. Amended: Filed Sept. 15, 1995, effective April 30, 1996. *Original authority: 192.006.1., RSMo (1993), amended 1995; 192.020, RSMo (1939), amended 1945, 1951; and 260.203, RSMo (1986), amended 1988, 1992, 1993Division of Community and Public Health
PURPOSE: This rule defines terminology used throughout this chapter and defines terms related to infectious waste.
- (1) Administrator is the person in charge of an institution, such as the chief executive officer, chairperson of the board, administrator, clinician in charge, or any equivalent position.
- (2) Board is the State Board of Health.
- (3) Carbon monoxide poisoning is defined as a carboxyhemoglobin level greater than fiteen percent (>15%)
- (4) Carrier is a person who harbors a specific infectious agent in the absence of discernible clinical disease and serves as a potential source or reservoir of infection for man.
- (5) Case, as distinct from a carrier, is a person in whose tissues the etiological agent of a communicable disease is lodged and which usually produces signs or symptoms of disease. Evidence of the presence of a communicable disease also may be revealed by routine laboratory findings.
- (6) Communicable disease is an illness due to an infectious agent or its toxic products and transmitted, directly or indirectly, to a suscep tible host from an infected person, animal or arthropod, or through the agency of an intermediate host or a vector, or through the inanimate environment.
- (7) Contact is a person or animal that has been in association with an infected person or animal and through that association has had the opportunity of acquiring the infection.
- (8) Designated representative is any person or group of persons appointed by the director of the Department of Health to act on behalf of the director or the State Board of Health.
- (9) Director is the state Department of Health director.
(10) Disinfection is the killing of pathogenic agents outside the body by chemical or physical means, directly applied.
- (A) Concurrent disinfection is disinfection immediately after the discharge of infectious material from the body of an infected person or after the soiling of articles with the infectious discharges.
- (B) Terminal disinfection is the process of rendering the personal clothing and immediate physical environment of a patient free from the possibility of conveying the infection to others after the patient has left the premises or after the patient has ceased to be a source of infection or after isolation practices have been discontinued.
- (11) Environmental and occupational diseases are illnesses or adverse human health effects resulting from exposure to a chemical, radiological or physical agent.
- (12) Exposure is defined as the absorption, ingestion or inhalation of chemical, radiological or physical agents by a human that results in biochemical, physiological or histological changes.
- (13) Food is any raw, cooked or processed edible substance, ice, beverage or ingredient used or intended for use in whole or in part for human consumption.
- (14) Health department is a legally constituted body provided by a city, county or group of counties to protect the public health of the city, county or group of counties.
- (15) Heat exhaustion means a reaction to excessive heat marked by prostration, weakness and collapse resulting from dehydration.
- (16) Heat stroke means a severe illness caused by exposure to excessively high temperatures and characterized by severe headache; high fever with a dry, hot skin; tachycardia; and in serious cases, collapse, coma or death.
- (17) Hyperthermia means a physician-diagnosed case of heat exhaustion or heat stroke.
- (18) Hypothermia means a physician-diagnosed case of cold injury associated with a fall of body temperature to less than ninetyfour and one-tenth degrees Fahrenheit (94.1°F) and resulting from unintentional exposure to a cold environment.
- (19) Immunization is a treatment which renders an individual less susceptible to the pathologic effects of a disease or provides a measure of protection against the disease. 19 CSR 20-20
(20) Infectious waste is waste capable of producing an infectious disease. For a waste to be infectious, it must contain pathogens with sufficient virulence and quantity so that exposure to the waste by a susceptible host could result in an infectious disease. Infectious waste generated by small quantity generators shall include the following categories:
- (A) Sharps—all discarded sharps including hypodermic needles, syringes and scalpel blades. Broken glass or other sharp items that have come in contact with material defined as infectious are included;
- (B) Cultures and stocks of infectious agents and associated biologicals—included in this category are all cultures and stocks of infectious organisms as well as culture dishes and devices used to transfer, innoculate and mix cultures; and
- (C) Other wastes—those wastes designated by the medical authority responsible (physician, podiatrist, dentist, veterinarian) for the care of the patient which may be capable of producing an infectious disease.
- (21) Institution is any public or private hospital, nursing home, clinic, mental health facility, home health agency, or medical or professional corporation composed of health care workers.
- (22) Isolation is the separation for the period of communicability of infected individuals and animals from other individuals and animals, in places and under conditions as will prevent the direct or indirect transmission of the infectious agent from infected individuals or animals to other individuals or animals who are susceptible or who may spread the agent to others.
- (23) Lead exposure means the laboratory determination of a human whole blood lead level greater than or equal to ten micrograms per deciliter ((cid:1)10 µg/dl) in persons under age eighteen ((cid:2)18) greater than or equal to twenty-five micrograms per deciliter ((cid:1)25 µg/dl) in persons age eighteen (18) or older.
- (24) Local health authority is the city or county health officer, director of an organized health department or of a local board of health within a given jurisdiction. In those counties where a local health authority does not exist, the health officer or administrator of the Department of Health district in which the county is located shall serve as a local health authority.
- (25) Outbreak or epidemic is the occurrence in a community or region of an illness(es) similar in nature, clearly in excess of normal expectancy and derived from a common or a propagated source.
- (26) Period of communicability is the period of time during which an etiologic agent may be transferred, directly or indirectly, from an infected person to another person or from an infected animal to a person.
- (27) Person is any individual, partnership, corporation, association, institution, city, county, other political subdivision authority, state agency or institution or federal agency or institution.
- (28) Pesticide poisoning means human disturbance of function, damage to structure or illness which results from the inhalation, absorption or ingestion of any pesticide.
- (29) Poisoning means injury, illness or death caused by chemical means.
(30) Quarantine is a period of detention for persons or animals that may have been exposed to a reportable disease. The period of time will not be longer than the longest period of communicability of the disease. The purpose of quarantine is to prevent effective contact with the general population.
- (A) Complete quarantine is a limitation of freedom of movement of persons or animals exposed to a reportable disease, for a period of time not longer than the longest period of communicability of the disease, in order to prevent effective contact with the general population.
- (B) Modified quarantine is a selective, partial limitation of freedom of movement of persons or domestic animals determined on the basis of differences in susceptibility or danger of disease transmission. Modified quarantine is designed to meet particular situations and includes, but is not limited to, the exclusion of children from school, the closure of schools and places of public or private assembly and the prohibition or restriction of those exposed to a communicable disease from engaging in a particular occupation.
- (31) Reportable disease is any disease or condition for which an official report is required. Any unusual group expression of illness which may be of public health concern is reportable and shall be reported to the local health department, local health authority or the Department of Health by the quickest means.
- (32) Small quantity generator of infectious waste is any person generating one hundred kilograms (100 kg) or less of infectious waste per month and as regulated in 10 CSR 80.
- (33) Toxic substance is 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 later, to the normal functions of humans, aquatic organisms or any other animal.
- (34) This rule will expire on June 30, 2005.
AUTHORITY: sections 192.006.1., 192.020 and 260.203, RSMo (1994).* This rule was previously filed as 13 CSR 50-101.010. Original rule filed July 15, 1948, effective Sept. 13, 1948. Rescinded and readopted: Filed Dec. 11, 1981, effective May 13, 1982. Amended: Filed Aug. 16, 1988, effective Dec. 29, 1988. Amended: Filed Aug. 14, 1992, effective April 8, 1993. Amended: Filed Sept. 15, 1995, effective April 30, 1996. *Original authority: 192.006.1., RSMo (1993), amended 1995; 192.020, RSMo (1939), amended 1945, 1951; and 260.203, RSMo (1986), amended 1988, 1992, 1993. (2) Category II diseases or findings shall be