Notifiable Diseases
Appendix 4 — Notifiable diseases Table 7: Schedule of Notifiable Conditions (Public Health Regulation 2018) Acute flaccid paralysis Food-borne or waterborne illness in 2 or more cases Acute rheumatic fever Food-borne or waterborne illness in food handler Acute viral hepatitis Gonococcal infection Adverse event following vaccination Haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS) Anthrax Haemophilus influenzae type b infection (invasive) Arbovirus (mosquito borne) infections Hendra virus infection alphavirus infections including: Hepatitis A – Barmah Forest Hepatitis B (acute) – getah – Ross River Hepatitis B (chronic) – sindbis Hepatitis B (not otherwise specified) bunyavirus infections including: Hepatitis C – gan gan – mapputta Hepatitis D – termeil Hepatitis E – trubanaman Hepatitis (other) flavivirus infections including: – alfuy Human immunodeficiency virus infection (HIV) – Edge Hill Influenza – kokobera Invasive group A streptococcal infection – West Nile/kunjin – Stratford Japanese encephalitis Other unspecified arbovirus infections Lead exposure (notifiable) (blood level of 5 µg/dL (0.24 µmol/L) or more) NB: dengue fever, yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis Legionellosis and Murray Valley encephalitis are listed separately Leprosy (Hansen’s disease) Australian bat lyssavirus infection Leptospirosis Australian bat lyssavirus, potential exposure Listeriosis Avian influenza Lyssavirus (unspecified) Botulism Malaria Brucellosis Measles Campylobacteriosis Melioidosis Chancroid Meningococcal disease (invasive) Chikungunya Mumps Chlamydia trachomatis infection Murray Valley encephalitis Cholera Non-tuberculous mycobacterial diseases Ciguatera intoxication Paratyphoid Coronaviruses Pertussis Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus Plague (MERS-CoV) severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) Pneumococcal disease (invasive) Cruetzfeldt-Jakob disease Poliomyelitis Cryptosporidiosis Psittacosis (Ornithosis) Dengue Q fever Diphtheria Rabies Donovanosis Rheumatic heart disease
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Rotavirus Tularaemia Rubella (including congenital rubella) Typhoid Varicella—zoster virus infection (chickenpox, shingles and Salmonellosis unspecified) Shiga toxin or vero toxin producing Escherichia coli infection (STEC/VTEC) Viral haemorrhagic fevers (Crimean-Congo, Ebola, Lassa fever and Marburg viruses) Shigellosis Smallpox Yellow fever Syphilis (including congenital syphilis) Yersiniosis Tetanus Zika virus Tuberculosis
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