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. 2017 Nov 7:451–467. doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-71812-5_37

Table 37.5.

Comparison of reportable conditions in North Carolina and California (as of December 2016)

Condition State Condition State
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) North Carolina Lymphogranuloma venereum North Carolina
Amebiasis California Malaria Both
Anaplasmosis California Measles (rubeola) Both
Anthrax Both Meningitis, pneumococcal North Carolina
Babesiosis California Meningitis, specify etiology: viral, bacterial, fungal, parasitic California
Botulism Both Meningococcal infections Both
Brucellosis Both Middle East respiratory syndrome North Carolina
Campylobacteriosis Both Monkeypox North Carolina
Chancroid Both Mumps Both
Chickenpox (varicella) (outbreaks, hospitalizations and deaths) California Nongonococcal urethritis North Carolina
Chikungunya virus infection Both Novel influenza virus infection North Carolina
Chlamydia trachomatis Both Novel virus infection with pandemic potential California
Cholera Both Paralytic poliomyelitis North Carolina
Ciguatera fish poisoning California Paralytic shellfish poisoning California
Coccidioidomycosis California Pelvic inflammatory disease North Carolina
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease Both Pertussis (whooping cough) California
Cryptosporidiosis Both Plague Both
Cyclosporiasis Both Poliovirus infection California
Cysticercosis or taeniasis California Psittacosis Both
Dengue Both Q fever Both
Diphtheria Both Rabies, human North Carolina
Domoic acid poisoning (amnesic shellfish poisoning) California Rabies, human or animal California
Ehrlichiosis Both Relapsing fever California
Encephalitis, arboviral North Carolina Respiratory syncytial virus (only report a death in a patient <5 years of age) California
Encephalitis, specify etiology: viral, bacterial, fungal, parasitic California Rickettsial diseases (non-rocky Mountain spotted fever), including typhus and typhus-like illnesses California
Escherichia coli, Shiga toxin-producing Both Rocky Mountain spotted fever Both
Flavivirus infection of undetermined species California Rubella (German measles) Both
Foodborne disease Both Rubella congenital syndrome North Carolina
Giardiasis California Salmonellosis Both
Gonococcal infections California Scombroid fish poisoning California
Gonorrhea North Carolina Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) North Carolina
Granuloma inguinale North Carolina Shiga toxin (detected in feces) California
Haemophilus influenzae, invasive disease Both Shigellosis Both
Hantavirus infection Both Smallpox Both
Hemolytic uremic syndrome Both Staphylococcus aureus with reduced susceptibility to vancomycin North Carolina
Hemorrhagic fever virus infection North Carolina Streptococcal infection, group A, invasive disease North Carolina
Hepatitis A, acute infection Both Streptococcal infections (outbreaks of any type and individual cases in food handlers and dairy workers only) California
Hepatitis B Both Syphilis Both
Hepatitis C Both Tetanus Both
Hepatitis D California Toxic shock syndrome North Carolina
Hepatitis E California Trichinosis Both
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection confirmed North Carolina Tuberculosis Both
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, stage 3 (AIDS) California Tularemia Both
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), acute infection California Typhoid (cases and carriers) Both
Influenza virus infection causing death North Carolina Typhus, epidemic (louse-borne) North Carolina
Influenza, deaths in laboratory-confirmed cases for age 0–64 years California Vaccinia North Carolina
Influenza, novel strains (human) California Vibrio infections Both
Legionellosis Both Viral hemorrhagic fevers, human or animal (e.g., Crimean-Congo, Ebola, Lassa, and Marburg viruses) California
Leprosy (Hansen disease) Both West Nile virus infection California
Leptospirosis Both Whooping cough North Carolina
Listeriosis Both Yellow fever Both
Lyme disease Both Yersiniosis California
Zika virus infection Both