LD 1405
pg. 12
Page 11 of 12 An Act To Prepare Maine for Public Health Emergencies LD 1405 Title Page
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LR 602
Item 1

 
4. It removes reference to the term "medical provider" and
clarifies reporting requirements of medical laboratories. "Medical
provider," which is undefined, is replaced with "health care
provider" and medical laboratories are added to the list of those
from whom the department may request information in an extreme
public health emergency.

 
5. The chapter has been renamed to acknowledge that
notifiable conditions include communicable, environmental and
occupational diseases. It provides definitions of "public health
threat" and "notifiable disease or condition" to allow for
reporting related to toxins or other agents that could have
serious implications either in the severity of the impact on
individuals or potential for impact on a large number of people.

 
6. It eliminates the Medical Legal Advisory Panel.

 
7. It clarifies that protected health information may be
disclosed to health providers in the event of an actual or
threatened outbreak or epidemic as declared by the Director of
the Bureau of Health.

 
8. It clarifies that, under the Maine Medical Laboratory Act,
licensed and unlicensed laboratories have public health reporting
requirements. This provision requires all laboratories that
receive, forward or analyze specimens of materials from the human
body or referred cultures of specimens from the human body and
report the results to health care providers who use the data for
purposes of patient care to comply with the law regarding control
and reporting of notifiable diseases and conditions. This
provision allows compliance with these requirements to be
considered when laboratories are evaluated and applications for
licenses or renewals are considered.

 
9. It provides employment protection in an extreme public
health emergency by protecting from unfavorable employment
actions an employee who has been quarantined or isolated or who
provides care to someone who has been isolated or quarantined
during an extreme public health emergency. The proposal is
modeled after legislation that was passed in Toronto as a result
of SARS and draws from several Maine laws providing employment
protection to those who are victims of abuse, on family medical
leave or serving in the military.


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