Exactly the same here as at Penn.

 

Lawrence D. Budnick, MD, MPH

Director, Occupational Medicine Service

Associate Professor of Medicine

Rutgers University - New Jersey Medical School

65 Bergen Street, Suite GA-167, Newark, NJ 07107

tel 973.972.2900

fax 973.972.2904

lawrence.budnick@rutgers.edu

 

CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email communication may contain private, confidential, or legally privileged information intended for the sole use of the designated and/or duly authorized recipient(s). If you are not the intended recipient or have received this email in error, please notify me immediately by email and permanently delete all copies of this email, including all attachments without reading them. If you are the intended recipient, please secure the contents in a manner that conforms to all applicable state and/or federal requirements related to privacy and confidentiality of such information. Thank you.

 

From: MCOH-EH [mailto:mcoh-eh-bounces@mylist.net] On Behalf Of Amy Behrman
Sent: Sunday, April 03, 2016 11:02 AM
To: MCOH/EH <mcoh-eh@mylist.net>
Subject: Re: [MCOH-EH] Question about requiring TB medications for employees

 

1. Yes

2. Strongly encouraged and facilitated, but not required

3. Yes

4. No consequences

Amy Behrman,MD

University of Pennsylvania

215-662-3192

 


On Apr 1, 2016, at 4:38 PM, Kathy.Dayvault@dekalbmedical.org wrote:

I am hoping to hear from folks who work in healthcare facilities that are considered high risk for TB.

 I am wondering how you manage employees with positive Skin or IGRA tests (all positives not just conversions after a specific exposure) who have received recommendations for treatment for latent TB.

Here are my questions:

1. Do you refer employees with positive results for evaluation?
2. Are they required to go for eval
3. If treatment is recommended, does the employee have the option of refusing treatment?
4. If treatment is refused by the employee, are there consequences associated with refusal?
     Consequences could include disciplinary action, removal from duty, termination or not allowing the employee to work in high risk areas.

I appreciate your time and feedback!

Thanks,

Kathy Dayvault, RN, BSN, MPH, COHN-S/CM
 Manager, Occupational Health and Safety
 WorksWell Onsite
 Dekalb Medical  2701 North Decatur Road
 Decatur, GA 30033
ph: 404.501.4972 Fax:404-501-2045
kathy.dayvault@dekalbmedical.org


CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail, including attachments, is for the sole use of the individual(s) to whom it is addressed, and may contain confidential and privileged information, including HIPAA protected PHI. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure, distribution, or reproduction is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender by reply e-mail and destroy this message and its attachments in its entirety.

<Dayvault_Kathy.vcf>

---------------------------------------
The MCOH-EH List is moderated by Joe Fanucchi MD FACOEM and Mike Band DO.
List membership is free, but only subscribers may post to the list.
To post send messages to: mcoh-eh@mylist.net
To become a subscriber, or to change your subscription options (turn off email while you're on vacation, etc):   http://www.mcoh-eh.net
MediTrax / Occupational Health Systems, Inc. provides financial support to ensure the list remains a free resource for the occupational health community.
---------------------------------------
List archives (public): http://mylist.net/archives/mcoh-eh/
---------------------------------------
Send administrative requests to: drjoe@meditrax.com
---------------------------------------