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ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH REPORTABLE DISEASES March 2008

Mandated reporters, such as health care providers, hospitals and laboratories, must report any suspected or confirmed case of these diseases to the local health authority within the number of days or hours indicated in parentheses. (*HIV/AIDS is reportable directly to IDPH)

Any suspected bioterrorist threat Measles (24h) (immediately) Mumps (24h) Any unusual case or cluster of cases that N. meningitidis, invasive (24h) may indicate a public health hazard Ophthalmia neonatorum (gonococcal) (7d) (immediately) Pertussis or whooping cough (24h) AIDS* (7d) Plague (immediately) Anthrax (immediately) Poliomyelitis (24h) Arboviruses (including WNV) (7 d) Psittacosis (7d) Botulism, foodborne (immediately) Q fever (7d unless bioterrorism suspected Botulism, infant, wound, other (24h) then immediately) Brucellosis (7d, unless bioterrorism Rabies, human and potential human suspected, then immediately) exposure (24h) Chancroid (7d) Reye syndrome (7d) Chickenpox (24h) Rocky Mountain spotted fever (7d) Chlamydia (7d) Rubella (24h) Cholera (24h) , other than typhoid (7d) Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (7d) Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Cryptosporidiosis (7d) (SARS) (immediately) Cyclosporiasis (7d) (7d) Diphtheria (24h) (immediately) Ehrlichiosis and Anaplasmosis (7d) Smallpox vaccination, complications of (24h) Enteric E. coli infections (STEC, O157:H7, S. aureus, Methicillin resistant (MRSA) ETEC, EPEC,EIEC) (24h) clusters in a community setting or colonization/ Foodborne or waterborne illness (24h) infection in infants <61 days (24h) Giardiasis (7d) S. aureus infections with intermediate or Gonorrhea (7d) high level resistance to vancomycin (24h) Haemophilus influenzae, invasive (24h) Streptococcal infections, Group A, invasive Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (24h) and sequelae to Group A streptococcal Hemolytic uremic syndrome, post diarrheal infections (24h) (24h) S. pneumoniae, invasive in those <5 yrs (7d) Hepatitis A (24h), B (7d), C (7d), D (7d) (7d) Histoplasmosis (7d) Tetanus (7d) HIV infection* (7d) Toxic syndrome due to S. aureus (7d) Influenza, deaths in <18 yr olds (7d) Trichinosis (7d) Influenza A, novel virus (immediately) Tuberculosis (7d) Legionellosis (7d) Tularemia (7d unless bioterrorism suspected Leprosy (7d) then immediately) Leptospirosis (7d) Typhoid fever (24h) Listeriosis (7d) Typhus (24h) Lyme disease (7d) Vibriosis (non cholera) (7d) Malaria (7d) Yersiniosis (7d)