Joke Collection Website - Public benefit messages - Will the inspector be notified if the health certificate is unqualified?

Will the inspector be notified if the health certificate is unqualified?

The inspector will be notified if the health certificate is unqualified.

The following are some precautions about health certificate for your reference:

The main diseases involved in health examination are dysentery, typhoid fever, active tuberculosis, dermatosis (infectious) and other infectious diseases. If you find these diseases, don't engage in hairdressing and beauty, direct contact with imported food, public toilets and other work that directly serves customers. You can only work if you are cured.

Physical examination place: local disease prevention and control center or medical and health institution approved by health administrative department to undertake preventive health examination. If this work is carried out without approval, the health supervision institution will not accept the issuance of health certificates.

Extended data:

Infectious disease information reporting takes all kinds of medical and health institutions at all levels as the responsibility reporting unit; Personnel performing their duties, rural doctors and individual practitioners are responsible for reporting the epidemic situation.

The following infectious diseases are not allowed to apply for health certificates:

(1) Class A infectious diseases: plague and cholera.

(2) Class B infectious diseases: SARS, AIDS (HIV-infected persons), viral hepatitis, polio, human infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza, measles, epidemic hemorrhagic fever, rabies, Japanese encephalitis, dengue fever and anthrax.

Bacterial and amebic dysentery, tuberculosis, typhoid and paratyphoid fever, epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis, whooping cough, diphtheria, neonatal tetanus, scarlet fever, brucellosis, gonorrhea, syphilis, leptospirosis, schistosomiasis, malaria and human infection with H7N9 avian influenza.

(3) Class C infectious diseases: influenza, mumps, rubella, acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis, leprosy, epidemic and endemic typhus, kala-azar, echinococcosis, filariasis, infectious diarrhea, hand-foot-mouth disease except cholera, bacterial and amebic dysentery, typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever.

(4) Other infectious diseases that the National Health and Family Planning Commission has decided to include in the management of Class B and Class C infectious diseases and other infectious diseases that carry out emergency monitoring reports according to Class A management.

References:

Management Specification for Infectious Disease Information Report of China Center for Disease Control and Prevention