PHU
|
Medical officers of health
|
Phone
|
Fax
|
Northland District Health Board
Public Health
|
Jonathan Jarman
Loek Henneveld
|
(09) 430 4100
|
(09) 430 4498
|
Auckland District Health Board
Public Health
|
Sheryl Jury
Craig Thornley
Greg Simmons
Cathy Pikholz
Julia Peters
Andrew Lindsay
Simon Baker
Denise Barnfather
|
(09) 623 4600
|
(09) 630 7431
Healthlink address (HL7): adhbphth
|
Waikato District Health Board
Public Health
|
Dell Hood
Felicity Dumble
Anita Bell
|
(07) 838 2569
|
(07) 838 2382
|
Toi Te Ora Public Health
Tauranga Office
|
Phil Shoemack
|
(07) 571 8975
|
(07) 578 5485
|
Toi Te Ora Public Health
Whakatane Office
|
Phil Shoemack
(based in Tauranga)
|
(07) 306 0717
|
(07) 306 0987
|
Toi Te Ora Public Health
Rotorua Office
|
Phil Shoemack
(based in Tauranga)
|
(07) 349 3520
|
(07) 346 0105
|
Tairawhiti District Health Board
Public Health Unit
|
Bruce Duncan
Geoffrey Cramp
|
(06) 867 9119
|
(06) 867 8414
|
Hawke’s Bay District Health Board
Public Health Unit
|
Lester Calder
Caroline McElnay
|
(06) 834 1815
|
(06) 834 1816
|
Taranaki Health Public Health Unit
|
Richard Hoskins
|
(06) 753 7798
|
(06) 753 7788
|
Wanganui Public Health Units
|
Patrick O’Connor
|
(06) 348 1775
|
(06) 348 1783
|
Mid Central District Health Board Public Health Units Palmerston North
|
Jill McKenzie
|
(06) 350 9110
|
(06) 350 9111
|
Regional Public Health Hutt Valley District Health Board (covering Wellington, Hutt Valley and Wairarapa)
|
Annette Nesdale
Margot McLean
Stephen Palmer
Deborah Read
|
(04) 570 9267
A/H: (04) 570 9002
|
(04) 570 9373
|
Nelson Marlborough District Health Board Public Health Unit – Nelson Office
|
Ed Kiddle
|
(03) 546 1537
|
(03) 546 1542
|
Nelson Marlborough District Health Board Public Health Unit – Blenheim Office
|
Maree Leonard
|
(03) 577 1914
|
(03) 578-9517
|
Community & Public Health Christchurch Office
|
Mel Brieseman
Alistair Humphrey
Ramon Pink
|
(03) 379 9480
|
(03) 379 6484
|
Community & Public Health
South Canterbury Office
|
Daniel Williams
|
(03) 688 6019
|
(03) 688 6091
|
Community & Public Health
West Coast Office
|
Cherly Brunton
|
(03) 768 1160
|
(03) 768 1169
|
Public Health South Dunedin Office
|
John Holmes
Marion Poore
Derek Bell
|
(03) 474 1700
|
(03) 471 4624
|
Appendix 3: Members of the Advisory Group and Project Team Direct Laboratory Notification Project Team
Don Bandaranayake Senior Advisor Public Health Medicine, Ministry of Health
Rebecca Blackmore Team Leader, Communicable Diseases, Ministry of Health
Shayne Hunter Senior Information Management Consultant, Ministry of Health
Mark Jacobs Director of Public Health (sponsor)
Colin Kumpula Analyst, Communicable Diseases, Ministry of Health
Ruth Wiltshire Project Manager, Wiltshire Hogan Ltd
Direct Laboratory Notification Advisory Group
Don Bandaranayake Senior Advisor Public Health Medicine, Ministry of Health
Timothy Blackmore Clinical Microbiologist, Capital and Coast Laboratory
Mel Brieseman Medical Officer of Health, Community and Public Health
Carole Hazelman Portfolio Manager, Public Health Operations, Ministry of Health
Mark Jacobs, Chair Director of Public Health
Sheryl Jury Medical Officer of Health, Auckland Regional Public Health
Iain Loan General practitioner, Taupo Health Centre
Colin Meehan Senior Advisor, Sector Accountability & Funding Directorate, Ministry of Health
Ruth Pirie ESR, Kenepuru Science Centre
Susan Taylor Clinical Microbiologist, Microbiology Department,
Middlemore Hospital
Appendix 4: Complete Set of Laboratory Notification Flowcharts
Campylobacteriosis
Notes.
-
Recommend that any sterile site isolates are identified to the species level by primary or reference laboratory
Salmonella including typhoid and paratyphoid fever
Notes
-
Salmonella serology may provide evidence of past infection but is not useful for diagnosis of acute illness. Requests for salmonella serology should be replaced with or performed in conjunction with blood cultures if the patient has a febrile illness.
Shigellosis
Cholera1
Notes
1. The notifiable condition is disease due to toxin-producing Vibrio cholerae. Rare strains of V. mimicus carry the cholera toxin gene and can produce cholera-like symptoms.
Acute gastroenteritis
Acute gastroenteritis is a clinical notification and laboratory notification is not required.
When a potential enteric pathogen is detected from a faeces sample, e.g. rotavirus, Cyclospora, Aeromonas, non-cholera Vibrio, Plesiomonas, C. difficile toxin, the laboratory will not know whether:
-
the person has acute symptoms
-
this case is linked to other cases
-
the affected person is in a high-risk occupation
However, a comment reminding clinicians of the need to notify if they are aware of further information is suggested and could be added when the above enteric pathogens are found.
For example:
“Acute gastroenteritis is notifiable to the local Medical Officer of Health when occurring in 2 or more linked persons, a person in a high risk occupation (food handler, early childhood worker, <5 year old attending child care, health care worker, or any others at higher risk of transmission because of illness or disability.”
Only if a laboratory becomes aware that cases are linked, need they notify the Medical officer of Health.
Measles
Note
1. For specimen requirements refer to www.cdhb.govt.nz/measles/ or www.labplus.co.nz
2. Recent immunization with MMR may also result in detectable anti-measles IgM or a significant increase in anti-measles IgG. Since laboratories do not necessarily have access to this information, all results consistent with possible measles infection should be reported to the Medical Officer of Health.
Mumps
Mumps
Note
1. Recent immunization with MMR may also result in detectable anti-mumps IgM or a significant increase in anti-mumps IgG. Since laboratories do not necessarily have access to this information, all results consistent with possible mumps infection should be reported to the Medical Officer of Health.
Rubella
Note
-
Recent immunization with MMR may also result in detectable anti-rubella IgM or a significant increase in anti-rubella IgG. Since laboratories do not necessarily have access to this information, all results consistent with possible rubella infection should be reported to the Medical Officer of Health.
Tetanus
The diagnosis is clinical.
Neither culture of the organism nor presence of antibodies to the toxin is proof of disease.
No action required for laboratories.
Rheumatic fever
The diagnosis is clinical.
Detection of pharyngeal S. pyogenes or changing streptococcal serology does not make the diagnosis.
No action required for laboratories.
Trichinosis (Trichiniasis, Trichinellosis)
Note
1. Muscle biopsy for histology collected at least 10 days and ideally ~4 weeks after infection.
2. Eosinophilia is supportive but not diagnostic.
Enterobacter sakasakii invasive disease
Brucellosis
Haemophilus influenzae type b invasive disease
Legionellosis
Leptospirosis
Listeriosis
Neisseria meningitidis invasive disease
Notes
-
Arrange for NAT testing on CSF if cultures sterile so that amplification product can be further characterised by ESR.
-
Meningococcal conjunctivitis should be notified to the Medical Officer of Health because of the potential for invasive disease in contacts of case
-
Only if clinical details provided of meningococcal disease.
-
Meningococci isolated from genital swabs are not associated with systemic disease (except for rare neonatal meningitis in babies born to colonised mothers) and need not be reported to the Medical Officer of Health.
Pertussis
Rickettsial disease
Notes.
-
Not routinely performed. Requires PC-3 facilities.
-
Titres of ≥1:64 are considered presumptive evidence of recent or current infection by organisms of the appropriate Rickettsial antigen group
Active Tuberculosis (new case, reactivation)
Notes
-
Samples should be collected for mycobacterial culture, if not already done.
Latent Tuberculosis (LTBI)
Latent Tuberculosis is only notified when there is a decision to treat.
Therefore no action is required by laboratories.
Leprosy
Note
-
Where confirmed by sequencing or validated species-specific PCR
Malaria
Notes
-
This result should always be confirmed by microscopy
Arboviral infection – Dengue & Ross River Virus1
Notes.
-
Serology for other arboviruses (e.g. Japanese encephalitis, West nile, Chikungunya) are available through overseas reference laboratories. The referring laboratory should also report any results from an overseas laboratory that are consistent with recent infection to the Medical officer of Health.
Hepatitis A
Note
-
Recent infection is not excluded without testing anti-HAV IgM. This should be noted on the result if the clinician specifically requests testing for HAV IgG only.
-
Recent immunization with HAV vaccine may also result in seroconversion. Since laboratories do not necessarily have access to this information, all results consistent with possible Hepatitis A infection should be reported to the Medical Officer of Health.
Recent Hepatitis B infection
Recent Hepatitis C infection
Note
-
A reactive anti-HCV result alone is insufficient evidence of recent HCV infection.
Hepatitis D
Hepatitis E
Note
-
HEV serology not performed in NZ.
Acquired Immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)
AIDS is a clinical syndrome. No action is required by laboratories.
Cryptosporidiosis
Giardiasis
Cysticercosis
-
Cysticercosis is caused by the larval stage of T. solium after ingestion of eggs, rather than encysted larvae, from contaminated food, water or via faecal-oral autoinoculation.
-
Stool examinations can be performed; however, eggs are typically not found, since the majority of people diagnosed with cysticercosis do not have a viable T. solium tapeworm in their intestines.
-
Serology is available through overseas reference laboratories for patients with suggestive radiological findings. Occasionally, the diagnosis of extraneural cysticercosis is made by finding a larval scolex in an excisional biopsy of a skin or muscle lesion.
Taeniasis
-
Taeniasis (adult tapeworm infection) occurs after the ingestion of inadequately cooked pork containing encysted T. solium larvae.
Notes
1. It is not possible to differentiate the eggs of T. solium from the beef tapeworm T. saginata. Identification to species level requires examination of proglottid segments passed in the stool.
Hydatid disease
Yersiniosis
Plague
Verotoxin-producing E. coli (VTEC) also known as Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC)
Diphtheria
Notes
1. The diagnosis of diphtheria is primarily a clinical one. Tox-containing, nontoxigenic isolates have been described.
Anthrax
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease and Other Spongiform Encephalopathies
Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis
Poliomyelitis
Notes
1. Enteroviral PCR performed on CSF may detect an enterovirus potentially including poliovirus. Unless PCR amplification product has been further characterized because of the clinical scenario, positive enterovirus PCR results need not be notified to the Medical Officer of Health.
SARS
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
Notes
1. Or other novel subtype of influenza A
Rabies or other Lyssavirus
Yellow Fever
Viral Haemorrhagic Fever (e.g. Ebola)
Laboratory testing for these viruses is not performed at this time within NZ.
Specimens from suspected cases would be referred to overseas laboratories.
For further information on laboratory testing refer to http://www.health.gov.au/internet/wcms/publishing.nsf/Content/cda-surveil-nndss-casedefs-distype.htm
Streptococcus pneumoniae invasive disease (Invasive Pneumococcal Disease)
Notes
-
Arrange for NAT testing on CSF if cultures sterile so that pneumococcal disease can be confirmed. Rarely, other gram-positive cocci such as beta-hemolytic streptococci and S. suis may cause meningitis, although a PICT should be negative in these cases.
Influenza A H1N1
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