Section 122410 Of Part 7. Hepatitis C From California Health And Safety Code >> Division 105. >> Part 7.
122410
. (a) The State Department of Health Services shall make
available protocols and guidelines developed by the National
Institutes of Health, the University of California at San Francisco,
and California legislative advisory committees on hepatitis C for
educating physicians and health professionals and training community
service providers on the most recent scientific and medical
information on hepatitis C detection, transmission, diagnosis,
treatment, and therapeutic decisionmaking.
(b) The guidelines referenced in subdivision (a) may include, but
not be limited to, all of the following:
(1) Tracking and reporting of both acute and chronic cases of
hepatitis C by public health officials.
(2) A cost-efficient plan to screen the prison population and the
medically indigent population in California.
(3) Protocols within the Department of Corrections to enable that
department to provide appropriate prevention and treatment to
prisoners with hepatitis C.
(4) Protocols for the education of correctional peace officers and
other correctional workers who work with prisoners with hepatitis C.
(5) Protocols for public safety and health care workers who come
in contact with hepatitis C patients.
(6) Surveillance programs to determine the prevalence of hepatitis
C in ethnic and other high-risk populations.
(7) Education and outreach programs for high-risk individuals,
including, but not limited to, individuals who received blood
transfusions prior to 1992, hemophiliacs, veterans, women who
underwent a caesarian section or premature delivery prior to 1990,
persons who received an organ transplant prior to 1990, persons who
receive invasive cosmetic procedures, including body piercing and
tattooing, students, minority communities, and any other categories
of persons at high risk for hepatitis C infection as determined by
the director. Education and outreach programs shall be targeted to
high-risk individuals as determined by the director. Education
programs may provide information and referral on hepatitis C
including, but not limited to, education materials developed by
health-related companies, community-based or national advocacy
organizations, counseling, patient support groups, and existing
hotlines for consumers.
(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to require the
department to develop or produce any protocol, guideline, or
proposal.