Document Citation: 28 Pa. Code § 27.71

Header:
PENNSYLVANIA ADMINISTRATIVE CODE
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Code
TITLE 28. HEALTH AND SAFETY
PART III. PREVENTION OF DISEASES
CHAPTER 27. COMMUNICABLE AND NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES
SUBCHAPTER C. QUARANTINE AND ISOLATION
COMMUN

Date:
08/31/2009

Document:
§ 27.71. Exclusion of children, and staff having contact with children, for specified diseases and infectious conditions

A person in charge of a public, private, parochial, Sunday or other school or college shall exclude from school a child, or a staff person, including a volunteer, who has contact with children, who is suspected by a physician or the school nurse of having any of the communicable diseases, infections or conditions. Readmission shall be contingent upon the school nurse or, in the absence of the school nurse, a physician, verifying that the criteria for readmission have been satisfied. The diseases, the periods of exclusion and the criteria for readmission are as follows:

(1) Diphtheria. Two weeks from the onset or until appropriate negative culture tests.

(2) Measles. Four days from the onset of rash. Exclusion may also be ordered by the Department as specified in § 27.160 (relating to special requirements for measles).

(3) Mumps. Nine days from the onset or until subsidence of swelling.

(4) Pertussis. Three weeks from the onset or 5 days from institution of appropriate antimicrobial therapy.

(5) Rubella. Four days from the onset of rash.

(6) Chickenpox. Five days from the appearance of the first crop of vesicles, or when all the lesions have dried and crusted, whichever is sooner.

(7) Respiratory streptococcal infections including scarlet fever. At least 10 days from the onset if no physician is in attendance or 24 hours after institution of appropriate antimicrobial therapy.

(8) Infectious conjunctivitis (pink eye). Until judged not infective; that is, without a discharge.

(9) Ringworm. The person shall be allowed to return to school, child care or other group setting immediately after the first treatment, if body lesions are covered. Neither scalp nor body lesions that are dried need to be covered.

(10) Impetigo contagiosa. Twenty-four hours after the institution of appropriate treatment.

(11) Pediculosis capitis. The person shall be allowed to return to either the school, child care or other group setting immediately after first treatment. The person shall be reexamined for infestation by the school nurse, or other health care practitioner, 7 days posttreatment.

(12) Pediculosis corpora. After completion of appropriate treatment.

(13) Scabies. After completion of appropriate treatment.

(14) Trachoma. Twenty-four hours after institution of appropriate treatment.

(15) Tuberculosis. Following a minimum of 2 weeks adequate chemotherapy and three consecutive negative morning sputum smears, if obtainable. In addition, a note from the attending physician that the person is noncommunicable shall be submitted prior to readmission.

(16) Neisseria meningitidis. Until judged noninfective after a course of rifampin or other drug which is effective against the nasopharyngeal carriage state of this disease, or until otherwise shown to be noninfective.