Section 22-B129. IMMUNIZATION: REPORTS AND GENERAL PROVISIONS  


Latest version.
  •  

    129.1Each health care provider shall report to the Department each immunization recommended in the United States by the ACIP that he or she administers, as well as the past immunizations administered by any health care provider, to a person twenty six (26) years of age or younger, within seven (7) days of administering the vaccination. Each health care provider shall report the information required by this subsection in the manner and form the Department prescribes. Each report shall include the following information:

     

    (a)Demographic information for each person vaccinated, including:

     

    (1)The person's full name, including any suffix, nickname, or alternate surname that may apply;

     

    (2)The person's date of birth and, for newborn's, the name of the hospital that delivered the newborn;

     

    (3)The person's social security number, if applicable;

     

    (4)The person's Medicaid number, if applicable;

     

    (5)The name of the person's parent or guardian, if the person is younger than eighteen (18) years of age;

     

    (6)The person's address;

     

    (7)The person's phone number;

     

    (8)The person's race or ethnicity;

     

    (9)The person's insurance status and the name of the insurer, if applicable; and

     

    (10)The person's gender.

     

    (b)Immunization data, including:

     

    (1)The type of each vaccine administered;

     

    (2)The date the vaccine was administered;

     

    (3)The manufacturer and lot number of the vaccine;

     

    (4)Verification that the vaccine information statement was given to the recipient of the vaccine and the publication date of the vaccine information statement for the vaccine given;

     

    (c)Provider information, including:

     

    (1)The provider's name;

     

    (2)The provider's address;

     

    (3)The provider's phone number; and

     

    (4)The name of the person who administered the vaccine; and

     

    (d)Medical and clinical information, including:

     

    (1)Any adverse reaction to active immunization;

     

    (2)Information about medical contraindications, including:

     

    (A)Whether contraindication is temporary or permanent; and

     

    (B)The antigen for which there was a contraindication;

     

    (3)Information about exemption from vaccination, including:

     

    (A)Reason for the exemption;

     

    (B)The antigen for which the exemption applies;

     

    (C)The date the exemption expires, if applicable;

     

    (4)Copy of laboratory results as evidence of immunity; and

     

    (5)Varicella disease status including certification of infection with varicella that includes either:

     

    (A)A copy of laboratory results indicating varicella disease or immunity to varicella; or

     

    (B)A health care provider's diagnosis or verified history of varicella or herpes zoster disease that includes the month and year of the disease.

     

    129.2Each of the following entities shall report the immunization history of an individual to the Department in the manner and form the Department prescribes:

     

    (a)Each public, private, parochial, or charter school shall submit certification of immunization for each noncompliant student as determined by the Department within ten (10) business days of notification from the Department; and

     

    (b)Each child development facility shall submit certification of immunization for each noncompliant child as determined by the Department within ten (10) business days of notification from the Department.

     

    129.3A post-secondary institution is not required to report active immunization, but the Department encourages reporting of immunization for students currently enrolled in the school.

     

    129.4Information disclosed to the Department pursuant to §§ 129.1 and 129.3 shall be kept confidential and shall not be used or disclosed to a third party, except as provided in this subsection. The Department may use and disclose information received pursuant to this section to safeguard the physical health of others as follows:

     

    (a)The Department may use patient-specific immunization information to produce aggregate immunization coverage reports;

     

    (b)The Department may use immunization information to produce official immunization records for individuals;

     

    (c)The Department may use or disclose individually identifiable immunization information without the consent of the person to whom the information pertains to notify the following individuals or entities of due dates for immunizations or missed or overdue immunizations according to the schedule recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) to the following:

     

    (1)The person;

     

    (2)The person's parent or guardian;

     

    (3)The person's health care provider or insurer;

     

    (4)A child development facility in which the person is enrolled;

     

    (5)A school in which the person is enrolled; and

     

    (d)Except as provided in subsections (a) through (c), the Department may disclose a person's individually identifiable information to a third party only with the written consent of the person, or the person's parent or guardian if the person is under eighteen (18) years of age or an unemancipated adult.

     

    129.5Notwithstanding the requirements of §§ 130 through 154 specifying minimum and maximum intervals between administration of vaccinations, a vaccine administered four (4) days or less than the minimum interval or age shall be a valid dose. This subsection shall not apply to the minimum intervals between live antigen vaccinations, including:

     

    (a)Measles, mumps, rubella (MMR); and

     

    (b)Varicella.

     

    129.6A vaccine administered five (5) or more days before the minimum interval or age shall not be counted as a valid dose and shall be repeated as age and interval-appropriate. The repeat dose shall be spaced after the invalid dose by the recommended minimum interval as provided in §§ 130 through 154.

     

    129.7A combination vaccine may be administered as an alternate for any dose of the vaccine series for which it is licensed.

     

    129.8A person claiming religious exemption from immunization for a child shall file the form at the beginning of each school year for each child for which the exemption is claimed.  A person electing to opt-out of immunization with the HPV vaccination for a child shall file the form at the beginning of each school year for each child for which there is an opt-out to be filed.

     

     

authority

§ 4 of the Immunization of School Students Act of 1979, effective September 28, 1979 (D.C. Law 3-20; D.C. Official Code § 38-503 (2012 Repl.)), Mayor’s Order 2006-117, dated September 5, 2006, § 1 of An Act to authorize the Commissioners of the District of Columbia to make regulations to prevent and control the spread of communicable and preventable diseases, approved August 11, 1939 (53 Stat. 1408, ch. 601, § 1; D.C. Official Code § 7-131 (2012 Repl.)), and § 2 of Mayor's Order 98-141, dated August 20, 1998.

source

Final Rulemaking published at 55 DCR 5253 (May 2, 2008); as amended by Final Rulemaking published at 61 DCR 12782 (December 19, 2014).