TITLE 12. HEALTH
Title of Regulation: 12VAC5-90. Regulations for
Disease Reporting and Control (amending 12VAC5-90-370).
Statutory Authority: §§ 32.1-12 and 32.1-35 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: September 25, 2015.
Agency Contact: Diane Woolard, Ph.D., Director, Division
of Surveillance and Investigation, Department of Health, 109 Governor Street,
Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 864-8124, or email
diane.woolard@vdh.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments provide that facilities that report data
into the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Healthcare
Safety Network (NHSN) for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting Program shall share the data, through the
NHSN, with the department.
Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: A
summary of comments made by the public and the agency's response may be
obtained from the promulgating agency or viewed at the office of the Registrar
of Regulations.
Part I
Definitions
EDITOR'S NOTE: The
proposed amendments to 12VAC5-90-10 were not adopted; therefore there are no
changes to this section.
12VAC5-90-10. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall
have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Acute care hospital" means a hospital as defined
in § 32.1-123 of the Code of Virginia that provides medical treatment for
patients having an acute illness or injury or recovering from surgery.
"Adult" means a person 18 years of age or
more.
"Adult intensive care unit" means a nursing care
area that provides intensive observation, diagnosis, and therapeutic procedures
for persons 18 years of age or more who are critically ill. Such units may also
provide intensive care to pediatric patients. An intensive care unit excludes
nursing areas that provide step-down, intermediate care, or telemetry only.
"Affected area" means any part or the whole of the
Commonwealth, which has been identified as where persons reside, or may be
located, who are known to have been exposed to or infected with, or who are
reasonably suspected to have been exposed to or infected with, a communicable
disease of public health threat. "Affected area" shall include, but
not be limited to, cities, counties, towns, and subsections of such areas,
public and private property, buildings, and other structures.
"Arboviral infection" means a viral illness that is
transmitted by a mosquito, tick, or other arthropod. This includes, but is not
limited to, chikungunya, dengue, eastern equine encephalitis (EEE), LaCrosse
encephalitis (LAC), St. Louis encephalitis (SLE), and West Nile virus (WNV)
infection.
"Board" means the State Board of Health.
"Cancer" means all carcinomas, sarcomas, melanomas,
leukemias, and lymphomas excluding localized basal and squamous cell carcinomas
of the skin, except for lesions of the mucous membranes.
"Central line-associated bloodstream infection"
means a primary bloodstream infection identified by laboratory tests, with or
without clinical signs or symptoms, in a patient with a central line device,
and meeting the current Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
surveillance definition for laboratory-confirmed primary bloodstream infection.
"Central line device" means a vascular infusion
device that terminates at or close to the heart or in one of the greater
vessels. The following are considered great vessels for the purpose of
reporting central line infections and counting central line days: aorta,
pulmonary artery, superior vena cava, inferior vena cava, brachiocephalic
veins, internal jugular veins, subclavian veins, external iliac veins, and
common femoral veins.
"Child care center" means a child day center, child
day program, family day home, family day system, or registered family day home
as defined by § 63.2-100 of the Code of Virginia, or a similar place providing
day care of children by such other name as may be applied.
"Clinic" means any facility, freestanding or associated
with a hospital, that provides preventive, diagnostic, therapeutic,
rehabilitative, or palliative care or services to outpatients.
"Clostridium difficile infection,
laboratory-identified event" means laboratory testing on unformed stool
that yields a positive result for Clostridium difficile toxin A or B or a
toxin-producing Clostridium difficile organism detected in the stool sample by
culture or other laboratory means, with duplicate reports on a patient ruled
out according to CDC definitions in the NHSN Patient Safety Component Manual,
MDRO and CDAD Module (June 2010).
"Commissioner" means the State Health Commissioner
or his duly designated officer or agent, unless stated in a provision of these
regulations that it applies to the State Health Commissioner in his sole
discretion.
"Communicable disease" means an illness due to an
infectious agent or its toxic products which is transmitted, directly or
indirectly, to a susceptible host from an infected person, animal, or arthropod
or through the agency of an intermediate host or a vector or through the
inanimate environment.
"Communicable disease of public health
significance" means an illness caused by a specific or suspected
infectious agent that may be transmitted directly or indirectly from one
individual to another. This includes but is not limited to infections caused by
human immunodeficiency viruses, bloodborne pathogens, and tubercle bacillus.
The State Health Commissioner may determine that diseases caused by other
pathogens constitute communicable diseases of public health significance.
"Communicable disease of public health threat"
means an illness of public health significance, as determined by the State
Health Commissioner in accordance with these regulations, caused by a specific
or suspected infectious agent that may be reasonably expected or is known to be
readily transmitted directly or indirectly from one individual to another and
has been found to create a risk of death or significant injury or impairment;
this definition shall not, however, be construed to include human
immunodeficiency viruses or the tubercle bacilli, unless used as a bioterrorism
weapon.
"Companion animal" means any domestic or feral dog,
domestic or feral cat, nonhuman primate, guinea pig, hamster, rabbit not raised
for human food or fiber, exotic or native animal, reptile, exotic or native
bird, or any feral animal or any animal under the care, custody, or ownership
of a person or any animal that is bought, sold, traded, or bartered by any
person. Agricultural animals, game species, or any animals regulated under
federal law as research animals shall not be considered companion animals for
the purpose of this regulation.
"Condition" means any adverse health event, such as
a disease, an infection, a syndrome, or as indicated by a procedure (including
but not limited to the results of a physical exam, laboratory test, or imaging
interpretation) suggesting that an exposure of public health importance has
occurred.
"Contact" means a person or animal known to have
been in such association with an infected person or animal as to have had an
opportunity of acquiring the infection.
"Contact services" means a broad array of services
that are offered to persons with infectious diseases and their contacts.
Contact services include contact tracing, providing information about current
infections, developing risk reduction plans to reduce the chances of future
infections, and connecting to appropriate medical care and other services.
"Contact tracing" means the process by which an
infected person or health department employee notifies others that they may
have been exposed to the infected person in a manner known to transmit the
infectious agent in question.
"Decontamination" means the use of physical or
chemical means to remove, inactivate, or destroy hazardous substances or
organisms from a person, surface, or item to the point that such substances or
organisms are no longer capable of causing adverse health effects and the
surface or item is rendered safe for handling, use, or disposal.
"Department" means the State Department of Health.
"Designee" or "designated officer or
agent" means any person, or group of persons, designated by the State
Health Commissioner, to act on behalf of the commissioner or the board.
"Ehrlichiosis/anaplasmosis" means human infections
caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis (formerly included in the category "human
monocytic ehrlichiosis" or "HME"), Ehrlichia ewingii or
Anaplasma phagocytophilum (formerly included in the category "human
granulocytic ehrlichiosis" or "HGE").
"Epidemic" means the occurrence in a community or
region of cases of an illness clearly in excess of normal expectancy.
"Essential needs" means basic human needs for
sustenance including but not limited to food, water, and health care, e.g.,
medications, therapies, testing, and durable medical equipment.
"Exceptional circumstances" means the presence, as
determined by the commissioner in his sole discretion, of one or more factors
that may affect the ability of the department to effectively control a
communicable disease of public health threat. Factors to be considered include
but are not limited to: (i) characteristics or suspected characteristics of the
disease-causing organism or suspected disease-causing organism such as
virulence, routes of transmission, minimum infectious dose, rapidity of disease
spread, the potential for extensive disease spread, and the existence and
availability of demonstrated effective treatment; (ii) known or suspected risk
factors for infection; (iii) the potential magnitude of the effect of the
disease on the health and welfare of the public; and (iv) the extent of
voluntary compliance with public health recommendations. The determination of
exceptional circumstances by the commissioner may take into account the
experience or results of investigation in Virginia, another state, or another
country.
"Foodborne outbreak" means two or more cases of a
similar illness acquired through the consumption of food contaminated with
chemicals or an infectious agent or its toxic products. Such illnesses include
but are not limited to heavy metal intoxication, staphylococcal food poisoning,
botulism, salmonellosis, shigellosis, Clostridium perfringens food poisoning,
hepatitis A, and Escherichia coli O157:H7 infection.
"Healthcare-associated infection" (also known as
nosocomial infection) means a localized or systemic condition resulting from an
adverse reaction to the presence of an infectious agent or agents or its toxin
or toxins that (i) occurs in a patient in a healthcare setting (e.g., a
hospital or outpatient clinic), (ii) was not found to be present or incubating
at the time of admission unless the infection was related to a previous
admission to the same setting, and (iii) if the setting is a hospital, meets
the criteria for a specific infection site as defined by CDC in the NHSN
Patient Safety Component Manual, Key Terms (June 2010).
"Healthcare-associated outbreak" means any
group of illnesses of common etiology occurring in patients of a healthcare
setting acquired by exposure of those patients to the disease agent while in
such a facility.
"Hepatitis C, acute" means the following clinical
characteristics are met: (i) discrete onset of symptoms indicative of viral
hepatitis and (ii) jaundice or elevated serum aminotransferase levels and the
following laboratory criteria are met: (a) serum alanine aminotransferase
levels (ALT) greater than 400 IU/L; (b) IgM anti-HAV negative (if done); (c)
IgM anti-HBc negative (if done); and (d) hepatitis C virus antibody (anti-HCV)
screening test positive with a signal-to-cutoff ratio predictive of a true
positive as determined for the particular assay as defined by CDC, HCV antibody
positive by immunoblot (RIBA), or HCV RNA positive by nucleic acid test.
"Hepatitis C, chronic" means that the laboratory
criteria specified in clauses (b), (c) and (d) listed above for an acute case
are met but clinical signs or symptoms of acute viral hepatitis are not present
and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels do not exceed 400 IU/L. This
category will include cases that may be acutely infected but not symptomatic.
"Immunization" means a procedure that increases the
protective response of an individual's immune system to specified pathogens.
"Independent pathology laboratory" means a
nonhospital or a hospital laboratory performing surgical pathology, including
fine needle aspiration biopsy and bone marrow specimen examination services,
which reports the results of such tests directly to physician offices, without
reporting to a hospital or accessioning the information into a hospital tumor
registry.
"Individual" means a person or companion animal.
When the context requires it, "person or persons" shall be deemed to
include any individual.
"Infection" means the entry and multiplication or
persistence of a disease-causing organism (prion, virus, bacteria, fungus,
parasite, or ectoparasite) in the body of an individual. An infection may be
inapparent (i.e., without recognizable signs or symptoms but identifiable by
laboratory means) or manifest (clinically apparent).
"Influenza A, novel virus" means infection of a
human with an influenza A virus subtype that is different from currently
circulating human influenza H1 and H3 viruses. Novel subtypes include H2, H5,
H7, and H9 subtypes or influenza H1 and H3 subtypes originating from a nonhuman
species.
"Invasive" means the organism is affecting a
normally sterile site, including but not limited to blood or cerebrospinal
fluid.
"Investigation" means an inquiry into the
incidence, prevalence, extent, source, mode of transmission, causation of, and
other information pertinent to a disease occurrence.
"Isolation" means the physical separation,
including confinement or restriction of movement, of an individual or
individuals who are infected with, or are reasonably suspected to be infected
with, a communicable disease in order to prevent or limit the transmission of
the communicable disease to uninfected and unexposed individuals.
"Isolation, complete" means the full-time
confinement or restriction of movement of an individual or individuals infected
with, or reasonably suspected to be infected with, a communicable disease in
order to prevent or limit the transmission of the communicable disease to
uninfected and unexposed individuals.
"Isolation, modified" means a selective, partial
limitation of freedom of movement or actions of an individual or individuals
infected with, or reasonably suspected to be infected with, a communicable
disease. Modified isolation is designed to meet particular situations and
includes but is not limited to the exclusion of children from school, the
prohibition or restriction from engaging in a particular occupation or using
public or mass transportation, or requirements for the use of devices or
procedures intended to limit disease transmission.
"Isolation, protective" means the physical
separation of a susceptible individual or individuals not infected with, or not
reasonably suspected to be infected with, a communicable disease from an
environment where transmission is occurring, or is reasonably suspected to be
occurring, in order to prevent the individual or individuals from acquiring the
communicable disease.
"Laboratory" as used herein means a clinical
laboratory that examines materials derived from the human body for the purpose
of providing information on the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of disease.
"Laboratory director" means any person in charge of
supervising a laboratory conducting business in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
"Law-enforcement agency" means any sheriff's
office, police department, adult or youth correctional officer, or other agency
or department that employs persons who have law-enforcement authority that is
under the direction and control of the Commonwealth or any local governing body.
"Law-enforcement agency" shall include, by order of the Governor, the
Virginia National Guard.
"Lead, elevated blood levels" means a confirmed
blood level greater than or equal to 10 micrograms of lead per deciliter
(μg/dL) of whole blood in a child or children 15 years of age and younger,
a venous blood lead level greater than or equal to 25 μg/dL in a person
older than 15 years of age, or such lower blood lead level as may be
recommended for individual intervention by the department or the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
"Least restrictive" means the minimal limitation of
the freedom of movement and communication of an individual while under an order
of isolation or an order of quarantine that also effectively protects unexposed
and susceptible individuals from disease transmission.
"Medical care facility" means any hospital or
nursing home licensed in the Commonwealth, or any hospital operated by or
contracted to operate by an entity of the United States government or the
Commonwealth of Virginia.
"Midwife" means any person who is licensed as a
nurse midwife by the Virginia Boards of Nursing and Medicine or who is licensed
by the Board of Medicine as a certified professional midwife.
"National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)" means a
surveillance system created by the CDC for accumulating, exchanging, and
integrating relevant information on infectious adverse events associated with
healthcare delivery.
"Nucleic acid detection" means laboratory testing
of a clinical specimen to determine the presence of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
or ribonucleic acid (RNA) specific for an infectious agent using any method,
including hybridization, sequencing, or amplification such as polymerase chain
reaction.
"Nurse" means any person licensed as a professional
nurse or as a licensed practical nurse by the Virginia Board of Nursing.
"Occupational outbreak" means a cluster of illness
or disease that is indicative of a work-related exposure. Such conditions
include but are not limited to silicosis, asbestosis, byssinosis,
pneumoconiosis, and tuberculosis.
"Outbreak" means the occurrence of more cases of a
disease than expected.
"Period of communicability" means the time or times
during which the etiologic agent may be transferred directly or indirectly from
an infected person to another person, or from an infected animal to a person.
"Physician" means any person licensed to practice
medicine or osteopathy by the Virginia Board of Medicine.
"Quarantine" means the physical separation,
including confinement or restriction of movement, of an individual or
individuals who are present within an affected area or who are known to have
been exposed, or may reasonably be suspected to have been exposed, to a
communicable disease and who do not yet show signs or symptoms of infection
with the communicable disease in order to prevent or limit the transmission of
the communicable disease of public health threat to unexposed and uninfected
individuals.
"Quarantine, complete" means the full-time
confinement or restriction of movement of an individual or individuals who do
not have signs or symptoms of infection but may have been exposed, or may
reasonably be suspected to have been exposed, to a communicable disease of
public health threat in order to prevent the transmission of the communicable
disease of public health threat to uninfected individuals.
"Quarantine, modified" means a selective, partial
limitation of freedom of movement or actions of an individual or individuals
who do not have signs or symptoms of the infection but have been exposed to, or
are reasonably suspected to have been exposed to, a communicable disease of
public health threat. Modified quarantine may be designed to meet particular situations
and includes but is not limited to limiting movement to the home, work, and/or
one or more other locations, the prohibition or restriction from using public
or mass transportation, or requirements for the use of devices or procedures
intended to limit disease transmission.
"Reportable disease" means an illness due to a
specific toxic substance, occupational exposure, or infectious agent, which
affects a susceptible individual, either directly, as from an infected animal
or person, or indirectly through an intermediate host, vector, or the
environment, as determined by the board.
"SARS" means severe acute respiratory syndrome
(SARS)-associated coronavirus (SARS-CoV) disease.
"School" means (i) any public school from
kindergarten through grade 12 operated under the authority of any locality
within the Commonwealth; (ii) any private or parochial school that offers
instruction at any level or grade from kindergarten through grade 12; (iii) any
private or parochial nursery school or preschool, or any private or parochial
child care center licensed by the Commonwealth; and (iv) any preschool handicap
classes or Head Start classes.
"Serology" means the testing of blood, serum, or
other body fluids for the presence of antibodies or other markers of an infection
or disease process.
"Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP)"
means a national quality initiative supported by The Joint Commission, the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and other partners in healthcare
that is designed to improve surgical care in hospitals.
"Surveillance" means the ongoing systematic
collection, analysis, and interpretation of outcome-specific data for use in
the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice. A
surveillance system includes the functional capacity for data analysis as well
as the timely dissemination of these data to persons who can undertake
effective prevention and control activities.
"Susceptible individual" means a person or animal
who is vulnerable to or potentially able to contract a disease or condition.
Factors that affect an individual's susceptibility include but are not limited
to physical characteristics, genetics, previous or chronic exposures, chronic
conditions or infections, immunization history, or use of medications.
"Toxic substance" means 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 over time, to the normal functions of humans, aquatic organisms,
or any other animal but not including any pharmaceutical preparation which
deliberately or inadvertently is consumed in such a way as to result in a drug
overdose.
"Tubercle bacilli" means disease-causing organisms
belonging to the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and includes Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, Mycobacterium bovis, and Mycobacterium africanum or other members
as may be established by the commissioner.
"Tuberculin skin test (TST)" means a test for
demonstrating infection with tubercle bacilli, performed according to the
Mantoux method, in which 0.1 ml of 5 TU strength tuberculin purified protein
derivative (PPD) is injected intradermally on the volar surface of the arm. Any
reaction is observed 48-72 hours after placement and palpable induration is
measured across the diameter transverse to the long axis of the arm. The
measurement of the indurated area is recorded in millimeters and the
significance of the measured induration is based on existing national and
department guidelines.
"Tuberculosis" means a disease caused by tubercle
bacilli.
"Tuberculosis, active disease" (also "active
tuberculosis disease" and "active TB disease"), as defined by
§ 32.1-49.1 of the Code of Virginia, means a disease caused by an airborne
microorganism and characterized by the presence of either (i) a specimen of
sputum or other bodily fluid or tissue that has been found to contain tubercle
bacilli as evidenced by culture or nucleic acid amplification, including
preliminary identification by rapid methodologies; (ii) a specimen of sputum or
other bodily fluid or tissue that is suspected to contain tubercle bacilli as
evidenced by smear, and where sufficient clinical and radiographic evidence of
active tuberculosis disease is present as determined by a physician licensed to
practice medicine in Virginia; or (iii) sufficient clinical and radiographic evidence
of active tuberculosis disease as determined by the commissioner is present,
but a specimen of sputum or other bodily fluid or tissue containing, or
suspected of containing, tubercle bacilli is unobtainable.
"Tuberculosis infection in children age less than 4
years" means a significant reaction resulting from a tuberculin skin test
(TST) or other approved test for latent infection without clinical or
radiographic evidence of active tuberculosis disease, in children from birth up
to their fourth birthday.
"Vaccinia, disease or adverse event" means vaccinia
infection or serious or unexpected events in persons who received the smallpox
vaccine or their contacts, including but not limited to bacterial infections,
eczema vaccinatum, erythema multiforme, generalized vaccinia, progressive
vaccinia, inadvertent inoculation, post-vaccinial encephalopathy or
encephalomyelitis, ocular vaccinia, and fetal vaccinia.
"Waterborne outbreak" means two or more cases of a
similar illness acquired through the ingestion of or other exposure to water
contaminated with chemicals or an infectious agent or its toxic products. Such
illnesses include but are not limited to giardiasis, viral gastroenteritis,
cryptosporidiosis, hepatitis A, cholera, and shigellosis. A single case of
laboratory-confirmed primary amebic meningoencephalitis or of waterborne
chemical poisoning is considered an outbreak.
Part XIII
Report Reporting of Healthcare-Associated Infections
12VAC5-90-370. Reporting of healthcare-associated infections.
A. Reportable infections and method and timing of
reporting. 1. Acute care hospitals shall collect enter data on
the following healthcare-associated infection infections in the
specified patient population: into CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network
according to CDC protocols in the NHSN Patient Safety Component Manual Modules:
Identifying HAIs (November 2009), Device-associated Module CLABSI Events (June
2010), MDRO and CDAD Module (June 2010), and CDC Locations and Descriptions
(July 2010). Acute care hospitals shall ensure that accurate and complete data
are entered at least quarterly within one month of the close of the calendar
year quarter and shall authorize the department to have access to
hospital-specific data contained in the NHSN database.
central 1. Central line-associated bloodstream
infections in adult intensive care units, including the number of central-line
days in each population at risk, expressed per 1,000 catheter-days.
2. Central line-associated bloodstream infections
outside intensive care, including in one adult inpatient medical ward and one
adult inpatient surgical ward. Wards selected should be those with the longest
length of stay during the previous calendar year, excluding cardiology,
obstetrics, psychiatry, hospice, and step-down units. Data shall include the
number of central-line days in each population at risk.
3. Clostridium difficile infection,
laboratory-identified events on inpatient units, with the exceptions
recommended by CDC protocol in the NHSN Patient Safety Component Manual, MDRO
and CDAD Module (June 2010). Data shall be collected year-round at the overall
facility-wide level. Data shall include patient days.
2. All acute care hospitals with adult intensive care units
shall (i) participate in CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network by July 1,
2008, (ii) submit data on the above named infection to the NHSN according to
CDC protocols and ensure that all data from July 1, 2008, to December 31, 2008,
are entered into the NHSN by January 31, 2009, and (iii) ensure accurate and
complete data are available quarterly thereafter according to a schedule
established by the department.
3. All acute care hospitals reporting the information noted
above shall authorize the department to have access to hospital-specific data
contained in the NHSN database.
B. Reportable process measures. Acute care hospitals
shall report to the department quarterly, within one month of the close of the
calendar year quarter, aggregate counts of the Surgical Care Improvement
Project (SCIP) Core Measures pertaining to the following surgical procedures:
hip arthroplasty, knee arthroplasty, and coronary artery bypass graft. Data
shall be collected in accordance with the Specification Manual for National
Hospital Inpatient Quality Measures (Version 3.3) and shall include counts of
the patient population and the applicable SCIP measures for each of the above
designated surgical procedures. Reports shall be submitted to the department’s
Division of Surveillance and Investigation. [ Data reported
Facilities that report data ] into the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention's National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) for the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting Program
shall [ be shared share the data ],
through the NHSN, with the department.
B. Liability protection and data release. Any person making
such report as authorized herein shall be immune from liability as provided by
§ 32.1-38 of the Code of Virginia. Infection rate data may be released to the
public by the department upon request. Data shall be aggregated to ensure that
no individual patient may be identified.
VA.R. Doc. No. R10-2109; Filed August 3, 2015, 1:45 p.m.