Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 19, § 20-20.020
PURPOSE: This rule designates the diseases which are infectious, contagious, communicable, or dangerous and must be reported to the local health authority or the Department of Health and Senior Services. It also establishes when they must be reported.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE: The secretary of state has determined that the publication of the entire text of the material which is incorporated by reference as a portion of this rule would be unduly cumbersome or expensive. This material as incorporated by reference in this rule shall be maintained by the agency at its headquarters and shall be made available to the public for inspection and copying at no more than the actual cost of reproduction. This note applies only to the reference material. The entire text of the rule is printed here.
(1) The diseases within the immediately reportable disease category pose a risk to national security because they: can be easily disseminated or transmitted from person to person; result in high mortality rates and have the potential for major public health impact; might cause public panic and social disruption; and require special action for public health preparedness. Immediately reportable diseases or findings shall be reported to the local health authority or to the Department of Health and Senior Services immediately upon knowledge or suspicion by telephone (1 (800) 392-0272), facsimile, or other rapid communication. Immediately reportable diseases or findings are—
(A) Selected high priority diseases, findings or agents that occur naturally, from accidental exposure, or as the result of a bioterrorism event: Anthrax Botulism Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Paralytic poliomyelitis Plague Rabies (Human) Ricin toxin Severe Acute Respiratory syndromeassociated Coronavirus (SARS-CoV) Disease Smallpox Tularemia (suspected intentional release) 19 CSR 20-20
Viral hemorrhagic fevers, suspected
intentional (e.g., Viral hemorrhagic fever diseases: Ebola, Marburg, Lassa, Lujo, new world Arenavirus (Guanarito, Machupo, Junin, and Sabia viruses), or Crimean-Congo);
(2) Reportable within one (1) day, diseases or findings shall be reported to the local health authority or to the Department of Health and Senior Services within one (1) calendar day of first knowledge or suspicion by telephone, facsimile, or other rapid communication. Reportable within one (1) day, diseases or findings are—
potentially transmissible through food Pertussis Poliovirus infection, nonparalytic Q fever (acute and chronic) Rabies (animal) Rubella, including congenital syndrome Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) Shiga toxin positive, unknown organism Shigellosis Staphylococcal enterotoxin B Syphilis, including congenital syphilis T-2 mycotoxin Tetanus Tuberculosis disease Tularemia (all cases other than suspected intentional release) Typhoid fever (Salmonella typhi) Vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (VISA), and Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA) Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus neuroinvasive disease Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus nonneuroinvasive disease Viral hemorrhagic fevers other than suspected intentional (e.g., Viral hemorrhagic fever diseases: Ebola, Marburg, Lassa, Lujo, new world Arenavirus (Guanarito, Machupo, Junin, and Sabia viruses), or Crimean- Congo) Yellow fever Zika;
tions that occur as a result of inoculation to prevent smallpox, including, but not limited to, the following: Accidental administration Contact transmission (i.e., vaccinia virus infection in a contact of a smallpox vaccinee) Eczema vaccinatum Erythema multiforme (roseola vaccinia, toxic urticaria) Fetal vaccinia (congenital vaccinia) Generalized vaccinia Inadvertent autoinoculation (accidental implantation) Myocarditits, pericarditis, or myopericarditis Ocular vaccinia (can include keratitis, conjunctivitis, or blepharitis) Post-vaccinial encephalitis or encephalamyelitis Progressive vaccinia (vaccinia necrosum, vaccinia gangrenosa, disseminated vaccinia) Pyogenic infection of the vaccination site Stevens-Johnson Syndrome.
itoring of HIV infection conducted within one hundred eighty (180) days prior to the test result used for diagnosis of HIV infection Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, pregnancy in newly identified or pre-existing HIV positive women Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, test results (including both positive and negative results) for children less than two (2) years of age whose mothers are infected with HIV Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, viral load measurement (including undetectable results) Hyperthermia Hypothermia Lead (blood) level less than forty-five micrograms per deciliter (<45 μg/dl) in any person Leptospirosis Listeriosis Lyme disease Malaria Methemoglobinemia, environmentally induced Mumps Non-tuberculosis mycobacteria (NTM) Occupational lung diseases including silicosis, asbestosis, byssinosis, farmer’s lung, and toxic organic dust syndrome Pesticide poisoning Powassan virus neuroinvasive disease Powassan virus non-neuroinvasive disease Psittacosis Rabies Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (Initiated) Respiratory diseases triggered by environmental contaminants including environmentally or occupationally induced asthma and bronchitis Rickettsiosis, Spotted Fever Saint Louis encephalitis/virus neuroinvasive disease Saint Louis encephalitis virus non-neuroinvasive disease Salmonellosis Streptococcus pneumoniae, Invasive disease (IPD-Invasive Pneumococcal Disease) Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS) Toxic shock syndrome, non-streptococcal Trichinellosis Tuberculosis infection Varicella (Chickenpox) Varicella deaths Vibriosis (non-cholera Vibrio species infections) West Nile virus neuroinvasive disease West Nile virus non-neuroinvasive disease Western equine encephalitis virus neuroinvasive disease Western equine encephalitis virus nonneuroinvasive disease Yersiniosis.
(6) A physician, physician’s assistant, nurse, hospital, clinic, or other private or public institution providing diagnostic testing, screening or care to any person with any disease, condition, or finding listed in sections (1)–(4) of this rule or who is suspected of having any of these diseases, conditions, or findings, shall make a case report to the local health authority or the Department of Health and Senior Services, or cause a case report to be made by their designee, within the specified time.
(7) Except for influenza, laboratory-confirmed and Varicella (Chickenpox); a case report as required in section (6) of this rule shall include the patient’s name, home address with zip code, date of birth, age, sex, race, home phone number, name of disease, condition or finding diagnosed or suspected, the date of onset of the illness, name and address of the treating facility (if any) and the attending physician, any appropriate laboratory results, name and address of the reporter, treatment information for sexually transmitted diseases, and the date of report.
(12) The following material is incorporated into this rule by reference:
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) Priority List of Hazardous Substances, available at: http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/cercla. This rule does not incorporate any subsequent amendments or additions.
(13) Each hospital and ambulatory surgical center shall report on a quarterly basis antibiogram data for infection, not colonization, from all body sites monitored by that health care facility. Antibiogram data to be reported shall include nosocomial methicillin sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), nosocomial S. aureus, nosocomial vancomycin sensitive enterococci, and nosocomial enterococci isolates. Data shall be reported directly to the Department of Health and Senior Services. Reporting shall include only a patient’s first diagnostic nosocomial isolate per admission of Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) and enterococci and the isolates corresponding methicillin or vancomycin sensitivity; irrespective of location or of other anti-microbial sensitivity(ies). Intermediate methicillin or vancomycin sensitivity shall be reported as resistant (i.e., methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) or vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), respectively).
(B) Aggregate antibiogram data for patients’ non-duplicative isolates, per admission, of nosocomial MRSA and VRE infections shall reflect susceptibility patterns and shall be reported as the:
aureus sensitive to methicillin (oxacillin, etc.);
aureus;
enterococci sensitive to vancomycin; and
rococci.
AUTHORITY : sections 192.006, 192.020, 210.040, and 210.050, RSMo 2016.* This rule SENIOR SERVICES was previously filed as 13 CSR 50-101.020. Original rule filed July 15, 1948, effective Sept. 13, 1948. Amended: Filed Sept. 1, 1981, effective Dec. 11, 1981. Rescinded and readopted: Filed Nov. 23, 1982, effective March 11, 1983. Emergency amendment filed June 10, 1983, effective June 20, 1983, expired Sept. 10, 1983. Amended: Filed June 10, 1983, effective Sept. 11, 1983. Amended: Filed Nov. 4, 1985, effective March 24, 1986. Amended: Filed Aug. 4, 1986, effective Oct. 11, 1986. Amended: Filed June 3, 1987, effective Oct. 25, 1987. Emergency amendment filed June 16, 1989, effective June 26, 1989, expired Oct. 23, 1989. Amended: Filed July 18, 1989, effective Sept. 28, 1989. Amended: Filed Nov. 2, 1990, effective March 14, 1991. Emergency amendment filed Oct. 2, 1991, effective Oct. 12, 1991, expired Feb. 8, 1992. Amended: Filed Oct. 2, 1991, effective Feb. 6, 1992. Amended: Filed Jan. 31, 1992, effective June 25, 1992. Amended: Filed Aug. 14, 1992, effective April 8, 1993. Amended: Filed Sept. 15, 1994, effective March 30, 1995. Amended: Filed Sept. 15, 1995, effective April 30, 1996. Emergency amendment filed June 1, 2000, effective June 15, 2000, expired Dec. 11, 2000. Amended: Filed June 1, 2000, effective Nov. 30, 2000. Emergency amendment filed Dec. 16, 2002, effective Dec. 26, 2002, expired June 23, 2003. Amended: Filed Dec. 16, 2002, effective June 30, 2003. Amended: Filed Oct. 1, 2004, effective April 30, 2005. Amended: Filed Feb. 15, 2006, effective Sept. 30, 2006. Amended: Filed Nov. 15, 2007, effective May 30, 2008. Amended: Filed Nov. 10, 2015, effective April 30, 2016. Emergency amendment filed Aug. 29, 2016, effective Sept. 8, 2016, expired March 6, 2017. Amended: Filed Aug. 29, 2016, effective Feb. 28, 2017. Emergency amendment filed June 28, 2019, effective July 8, 2019, terminated Jan. 30, 2020. Amended: Filed June 28, 2019, effective Jan. 30, 2020. ** Emergency amendment filed Jan. 27, 2020, effective Feb. 10, 2020, expired Aug. 7, 2020. Amended: Filed Jan. 27, 2020, effective July 30, 2020.
*Original authority: 192.006, RSMo 1993, amended 1995; 192.020, RSMo 1939, amended 1945, 1951, 2004, 2016; 210.040, RSMo 1941, amended 1993; and 210.050, RSMo 1941, amended 1993. **Pursuant to Executive Order 21-07, 19 CSR 20-20.020, sections (1), (6), and (8) was suspended from March 23, 2020 through August 31, 2021; section (10) and section 192.067, RSMo was suspended from March 26, 2020 through August 31, 2021; section (6) was suspended from April 2, 2020 through August 31, 2021; 19 CSR 20- 20.020 and sections 192.067 and 192.667, RSMo was suspended from April 3, 2020 through August 31, 2021; and 19 CSR 20-20.020 and sections 192.067 and 192.667, RSMo was suspended from April 8, 2020 through August 31, 2021.