Reportable Diseases

Reportable Diseases montage

Communicable diseases are easily spread from person to person. Prompt reporting of a communicable disease can allow public health officials to locate and treat exposed persons, identify and contain outbreaks, and interrupt disease transmission. The information obtained from disease reporting is also used to monitor disease trends, identify high risk groups, develop policy, and design prevention programs.


2024 Reporting Guidance - *Effective January 1, 2024


An excerpt of Reportable Diseases Rule and Regulations is below. Click a here for the full guidance.

1200-14-01-.02 REPORTABLE DISEASES.

  1. All healthcare providers and other persons knowing of or suspecting a case, culture, or specimen of a reportable disease or event shall report that occurrence to the Department of Health in the time and manner set forth by the Commissioner in the List.
  2. The Commissioner shall re-evaluate, update, and post the List at least annually and from time to time as appropriate. The Commissioner shall post the annual update on or before November 15th of each year and this new List shall become effective starting January 1st of the following year. If the Commissioner posts an updated List more frequently than on an annual basis, then the updated List will become effective on the date stated in the List. The List shall be available online at the Department of Health’s web page and in print.
For Healthcare Providers
For Healthcare Providers
For Laboratories
For Laboratories

Regional health office e-mail addresses and contact numbers:

The Tennessee Department of Health Laboratory Services consists of the Microbiology Laboratories and Environmental Laboratories in Nashville and Knoxville.

For details on which diseases, events, or conditions, have requested or required submission to the state public health laboratory, along with submission requirements, refer to the Detailed Laboratory Guidance document. Additional information about submission requirements, including forms, is available at https://www.tn.gov/health/health-program-areas/lab.html. In addition, a directory of services is available at https://www.tn.gov/health/health-program-areas/lab/directory-of-services.html.

Central Laboratory 

Address for letter (non-specimen) mail

TDH Laboratory Services
630 Hart Lane
Nashville, TN 37243
 

Physical Location and Address for items shipped by carriers other than US Postal Service (FedEx, UPS)

TDH Laboratory Services
630 Hart Lane
Nashville, TN 37216
 

Address for specimens shipped via the US Postal Service

TDH Laboratory Services
P.O. Box 305130
Nashville, TN 37230

 

Phone: (615) 262-6300
Fax: (615) 262-6393

 

Regional Laboratory

Address for letter and specimen mail via US Postal Service

Knoxville Regional Laboratory
P.O. Box 59019
Knoxville, TN 37950
 

Physical Location and address for items shipped by carriers other than the US Postal Service (FedEx, UPS)

Knoxville Regional Laboratory
2101 Medical Center Way
Knoxville, TN 37920
 

Phone: (865) 549-5201
Fax: (865) 594-5199

Reportable Diseases

Alphabetical listing of reportable diseases and events including description, reporting requirements, laboratory testing algorithms, case definitions, investigation protocols, and report forms. 

Surveillance data and summary reports for most reportable diseases and events are found here https://tn.gov/health/ceds-weeklyreports.html.

C

California Serogroup/LaCrosse virus infection
Candida auris (including rule-out Candida auris)
Campylobacteriosis (including EIA or PCR positive stools)
Carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Chagas disease
Chikungunya
Chlamydia
Cholera                                                               
Cronobacter, Invasive                                                      Clostridioides difficile                                                  Colistin-Resistant (Plasmid-Mediated) Gram Negative Bacteria                                                                     
Congenital Rubella Syndrome                              Coronavirus, Novel                                                        COVID-19                                                          Cryptosporidiosis                                                  Cyclosporiasis