Reportable
Communicable Diseases
and Conditions |
301-583-3750
Weekdays
301-583-3794
Fax |
240-508-5774
After hours and weekends
Dial 711 for MD Relay
TTY/STS
|
|
Per Health-General 18-201 and 18-202, and Code of Maryland Regulations 10.06.01 Communicable Diseases
|
Report the Following Conditions:
►Any outbreak of disease/bioterrorism event with known or unknown etiology that may be a public health danger
►Any single case of disease/bioterrorism event with known or unknown etiology that may be a public health danger
►Any unusual manifestation of a communicable disease
|
Acquired Immunodeficiency
Syndrome (AIDS)
Amebiasis
Anaplasmosis
►Animal bites
►Anthrax
►Arboviral infections
Babesiosis
►Botulism
►Brucellosis
Campylobacteriosis
Chancroid
Chlamydia infection
►Cholera
Coccidioidomycosis
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
Cryptosporidiosis
Cyclosporiasis
►Diphtheria
Ehrlichiosis
Encephalitis, infectious
►Epsilon toxin of Clostridium
perfringens
►Escherichia coli 0157:H7 infection
Giardiasis
►Glanders
Gonococcal infection
►Haemophilus influenzae, invasive
disease
►Hantavirus infection
Harmful Algal Bloom related illness
Hemolytic uremic syndrome,
post-diarrheal
Hepatitis, viral (►A,B,C, all other types
and undetermined) |
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV)
Influenza-associated pediatric
mortality
►Influenza: novel influenza A virus
infection
Isosporiasis
Kawasaki syndrome
►Legionellosis
Leprosy
Leptospirosis
Listeriosis
Lyme disease
Malaria
►Measles (Rubeola)
►Melioidosis
Meningitis, infectious
►Meningococcal, invasive disease
Microsporidiosis
Mumps (infectious parotitis)
Mycobacteriosis, other than
Tuberculosis and Leprosy
►Pertussis
Pertussis vaccine adverse reactions
Pesticide related illness
►Plague
Pneumonia in a hospitalized health
care worker
►Poliomyelitis
Psittacosis
►Q fever
►Rabies (human)
►Ricin toxin poisoning
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
|
►Rubella (German measles) and
Congenital Rubella Syndrome
Salmonellosis (nontyphoidal)
►SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome)
►Shiga-like toxin producing enteric
bacterial infections
Shigellosis
►Smallpox and other
Orthopoxvirus infections
►Staphylococcal enterotoxin B
poisoning
Streptococcal invasive disease,
Group A and Group B
Streptococcus pneumoniae,
invasive disease
Syphilis
Tetanus
Trichinosis
►Tuberculosis and suspected
tuberculosis
►Tularemia
►Typhoid fever (Salmonella typhi
case, carrier, or both)
Vancomycin-Intermediate
Staphylococcus Aureus (VISA)
infection or colonization
Vancomycin-Resistant
Staphylococcus Aureus (VRSA)
infection or colonization
Varicella (chickenpox), fatal cases only
Vibriosis, non-cholera types
►Viral hemorrhagic fevers (all types)
Yersiniosis
|
Download Page (PDF)
► = Report Immediately by Telephone
Report all others within 1 working day |

|
Division of Epidemiology and Disease Control
Communicable and Vector-Borne Disease Control Program
Cheverly Health Center | 3003 Hospital Drive | Suite 1066 | Cheverly MD 20785 |