HM3515 Communicable Diseases

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UNIFORM PROCEDURE SUBJECT: Communicable Diseases RELATES TO POLICY SERIES: Health & Medical SUPPORTS POLICY#: DATE CABINET APPROVED: October 2004 ACTIVITY: Safety HM3515 Communicable Diseases Intermediate District 287 adopts the guidelines regarding communicable diseases as established by the Minnesota Department of Health. Copies of these guidelines may be obtained through the Office of Human Resources. In addition to dealing with the historically more common contagious diseases such as measles, rubella, meningitis, etc., there is now more potential for staff and students to encounter chronic and/more life threatening infectious conditions including hepatitis B, cytomegalovirus (CMV), herpes simplex (HSV), TB, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The District respects the rights of individuals with a communicable disease to education, to privacy, and to be free from discrimination. The District also acknowledges the rights of others in the system to be educated in a safe environment and the need to educate administrators, staff, and students about preventing and reducing the risk of transmission of communicable diseases. The superintendent will appoint a District First Response Team whose members will be trained and knowledgeable and whose background and/or position is relevant to the responsibility involved. The response team will act in a support/advisory capacity to the Superintendent, serve as liaison to the community regarding matters related to communicable disease, and may also coordinate the district s staff inservice for communicable disease. ADMISSION/ATTENDANCE OF STUDENTS WITH CONTAGIOUS DISEASE The purpose of this procedure is to minimize interruptions to learning resulting from communicable diseases. Students with communicable diseases will not be excluded from attending school in their regular classrooms so long as their attendance does not create a substantial risk of the transmission of illness to other students or employees of the district. The School District recognizes that some students, because of age or handicapping conditions, and some employees, because of special conditions, may pose greater theoretical or possible risks for the transmission of communicable diseases than other

persons infected with the same illness. Examples include students who display biting behavior and students and employees who are unable to control their body fluids or have uncovered oozing wounds. These rare conditions need to be taken into account and considered in assessing the risk of transmission of the disease and the resulting effect upon the educational program of the student or employment of the employee. Should it come to the attention of the district that a student has a chronic contagious or communicable condition that may pose a risk to others, a health-planning team shall be established with consent from the parent or adult student. The health-planning team shall provide support to the student, assist in establishing appropriate career goals, and monitor the impact of the condition on the student's educational program. This healthplanning team would include the student or parent of a minor student, classroom instructor, administration representative, and a knowledgeable health professional. In the Division of Special Education, the educational planning team with the addition of a health professional, would assume these responsibilities. The health team will develop a written individual health plan (IHP) for the student to document issues and decisions regarding the impact of the contagious disease on the student's educational program. Any student with AIDS or who is infected with the AIDS virus shall have a physician as an active member of this planning team. Attendance at the planning conference would be preferable, but other avenues for this input can be developed on an individual basis. Decisions regarding the type of educational setting for the infected student are to be based on current medical, public health, or scientific information about transmission, his/her behavior, neurological development, physical condition, and the type of interaction necessary to carry out an educational program. Under most circumstances, students with the AIDS virus shall be allowed to attend school in their regularly assigned classroom setting. Students with the AIDS virus may experience immunodeficiency putting them at risk for the development of severe complications from other infectious agents encountered in the classroom setting. Such risk and its effect on attendance can be best assessed by the student's physician. Some students with the AIDS virus may pose a greater risk to others; however, the affected student shall not be excluded from the receipt of an appropriate education even though circumstances require the temporary or long term placement outside the student's regular setting. The determination of an alteration of the student's educational placement must be done on an individual basis using the Educational Planning Conference (EPC) model, thus following established procedures and protections. The planning team should also include a member of the Commissioner of Health's AIDS Advisory Committee in those cases where it appears long-term placement outside the student's regular setting may be advisable. The decision regarding longterm placement outside the student's regular setting should be reviewed annually or more often as are all decisions regarding educational placement. STAFF AND STAFF ASSIGNMENT Employees with communicable diseases will not be excluded from attending to their customary employment so long as they are able to perform tasks assigned to them and

so long as their employment does not create a substantial risk of the transmission of illness to students or other employees of the district. If a student is to be provided an alternative education program by Intermediate District 287 (due to a contagious disease), services will first be provided by school employees on a volunteer basis. If no employees with the appropriate qualifications and experience volunteer, the District will assign employees to provide alternative programs determined to be necessary for the student. Staff who is medically at high risk in regard to certain contagious diseases (such as CMV) shall be assigned to work in environments which minimize such risk. It is the responsibility of the staff person to inform the district administration in writing of this need. Medical verification may be requested. FIRST RESPONSE AND DATA PRIVACY Intermediate District 287 respects all individuals' right to data privacy and will safeguard this right. Health data regarding students and employees is private data (Minnesota Statutes 13.32 Subd. 2, and 13.43, Subd. 2) and is not to be disseminated to the public, staff, or other employees without the strict observance of data privacy rights. Knowledge that a student or employee has a communicable disease will be limited to those persons determined by the Superintendent to have a direct need to know and upon consent for release of such information by the parent of a minor student or by the student if an adult. The sharing of this information with non-eligible individuals is considered a serious breach of professional ethics as well as a violation of law. Any willful disclosure of information may constitute just cause for suspension or dismissal from employment. In all cases in which the Superintendent (or the Superintendent's designee) becomes aware that a student or employee of the district has contracted a chronic or life threatening communicable disease, the Superintendent will take the following steps: A. Inform public health authorities of the situation in accordance with the state rule on communicable diseases (Minn. Rules Part 4605.7040). B. Contact the student, parent(s) or guardian of a minor student, or in the case of an employee, the employee to discuss the district procedures and support, and request consent for release of information to the District First Response Team (those individuals so designated by the Superintendent). C. In rare situations, for AIDS virus infection where the student or employee has a high risk of transmission, contact the Minnesota Commissioner of Health and request the commissioner to convene the AIDS Advisory Committee to review the case and to provide recommendations regarding educational

placement for a student or continued attendance at work for an employee. D. Upon receiving written consent from the student, parent(s) or guardian of a minor student or, in the case of an employee, the employee, confer with the treating physician in order to determine significant medical facts concerning the diagnosis of the disease or factors affecting the possible transmission of the disease. (Confer with public health officials for the latest information about the disease in general.) E. If consent is not provided or if obtaining consent would result in a delay which would endanger public health, the Superintendent may take appropriate action as advised by public health authorities. EDUCATION AND INSERVICE To ensure that all staff is knowledgeable regarding district policy and procedures, as well as having a basic understanding of communicable health conditions, each employee is required to attend a district sponsored inservice training program related to these topics. This inservice is provided to all new staff and any staff not previously inserviced. This workshop addresses issues related to the management of students with communicable or contagious diseases, infected personnel, and related legal considerations. Its purpose is the dissemination of accurate, current, and appropriate information. Periodic updates will be provided through additional inservice or memoranda. Staff and other employees who may be expected to have contact with a student or employee under circumstances giving rise to a risk of transmission of a serious illness will be informed about the potential for exposure. They will be provided instruction regarding the possible modes of transmission of the disease and prevention/protection measures. They will also be provided at no cost to them any special supplies, such as disposable gloves, which medical and/or public health advisors deem to be appropriate. An educational program is developed and delivered for students who may benefit from or need to be informed about chronic infectious diseases, modes of transmission, and precautions. Curriculum and instructional units shall be designed and delivered to cover chronic infectious diseases, their transmission, and appropriate hygienic measures to prevent the spread of chronic infectious diseases. Program administrators will ensure that appropriate instruction is offered within their area of responsibility. Students who are known carriers of a chronic infectious disease should be individually tutored regarding additional control measures for minimizing transmission of the specific disease. For students involved in technical planning, attention will be given to assisting the student in determining his/her level of health risk in relation to certain diseases and the implications of such risk to career choice.

REPORTING 1. Incident Reporting If a staff person becomes aware of an incidence of chronic or life threatening communicable disease within the district staff or student population, the Superintendent is to be notified immediately that there is such a situation. Data privacy states that this is private information. Only with written consent of the parent of a minor student, the adult student, or the staff person infected with such a disease can any information be disclosed from which the individual subject of the information can be identified. 2. Accident Report In the event a student or employee has significant exposure* to fluids, secretion or excretion, the student or employee is to report the incident immediately to the instructor or supervisor. The instructor or supervisor is to complete Intermediate District 287 s "Supervisor's Report of Accident" for an employee or "Accident Report" for students. *Significant exposure occurs when infectious body fluids or tissues come in contact with a person's blood or mucous membranes. This includes needle sticks, puncture wounds, or skin breaks.