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Zhuhai City Public Health Emergency Procedures (Trial Implementation)

Original Language Title: 珠海市突发公共卫生事件应急办法(试行)

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(Health No. 38 of 18 June 2003)

Contents
Chapter I General
Chapter II Emergency systems
Section I Command system
Section II Monitoring and early warning systems
Section III Medical rescue system
Section IV Control systems
Section V Information systems
Section VI
Chapter III Prevention
Chapter IV report
Chapter V
Section I
Section II Emergency response
Section III
Section IV
Section V
Chapter VI Legal responsibility
Chapter VII
Chapter I General
Article 1, in order to effectively prevent, control and eliminate the hazards of public health emergencies, guarantee public health and life safety, preserve social stability and promote economic development, and develop this approach in line with the Emergency Regulations on Emerging Public Health Incidents and relevant laws, regulations and regulations.
Article 2 refers to sudden public health incidents (hereinafter referred to as a sudden incident), which may result in, or may result in, major communicable diseases that cause serious harm to the health of the public, community-based unaccounted for diseases, major food and occupational poisoning and other events that seriously affect public health.
Article 3. This approach applies to emergency response in the present municipal administration.
Article IV responds to emergencies and should be guided by a preventive and permanent approach to follow up on the harmonization of leadership, tier responsibility, responsiveness and measures that are decisive, based on the principles of science, cooperation and the establishment of professional institutions, as well as mechanisms supported by government forces.
Article 5 Governments are responsible for emergency response in the current administrative area.
The municipal health administration authorities (hereinafter referred to as the health sector) implement integrated monitoring management of the prevention and control of emergencies across the city.
The relevant authorities at all levels are able to respond to emergencies within their respective responsibilities.
Health oversight at all levels is conducted in accordance with the same-tier health sector-mandated prevention and control measures for units and individuals.
Article 6. Governments at all levels are responsible for responding to emergencies in emergencies that should reflect the principle of integrity, unity of ownership and the inclusion of requirements in the financial budget.
Various sources are encouraged to fund emergency response to emergencies; receive funds from all sectors of society and implement income and expenditure line management.
Article 7. Governments should intensify their inputs to establish a public health service system adapted to national economic and social development, to improve rural, sea and community public health services, and to ensure emergency facilities, equipment, treatment of drugs and medical equipment.
Article 8. Governments at all levels and their health sector should implement the benefits of health personnel involved in emergency response to emergencies, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the State and the province. The specific approach was developed by the financial sector with the health sector and was approved by the same-ranking government.
Any unit and individual of Article 9 must be subject to the law to the search, inspection, investigation, evidence, supervision and enforcement of preventive measures and the right to investigate, prosecute violations of this approach.
Article 10. Governments and relevant departments provide recognition and incentives for those who contribute to the emergency response of sudden-onset incidents, as well as incentives for units and individuals that report sudden incidents.
It recognizes that specific incentives are developed by the personnel sector with the relevant departments and are submitted to the Government for approval.
Chapter II Emergency systems
Section I Command system
Article 11. The Municipal Government has established the Ministry of Emergency Response (hereinafter referred to as the Command), the relevant municipal authorities, the central, provincial jewelling units, and the military and police force in the city, the Mayor's overall command, the Deputy Mayor's Deputy Head of State, leading and directing emergency response efforts across the city.
Article 12. The Office, established under the Ministry of Command, is located in the Urban Health Agency responsible for the day-to-day work and performs the following main duties:
(i) In accordance with the Provincial Emergency Preparedness Profiles, the organization of the preparation of emergency preparedness cases for the current collateral incident, with clear membership and related unit responsibilities.
(ii) Examination of the performance of the duties of the member units of the Department.
(iii) To collect, collate, analyse, communicate and disseminate information.
Article 13 establishes an exceptional system for the regular exchange of information on the monitoring and early warning of emergencies and the deployment of work; and, in the event of sudden incidents or other major circumstances, the meetings are convened on the basis of actual needs.
Following the incident, the command performs the following main duties:
(i) Command the immediate arrival of the relevant departments and units to take the relevant control measures.
(ii) Mobilization of health-care institutions to carry out care-related work.
(iii) Based on the need for urgent mobilization of personnel, reserves, transportation tools and related facilities, equipment.
(iv) Urgent measures on the ground of sudden-onset events, depending on the need to determine the evacuation or separation of persons.
(v) Execution of controls on food and water resources, as required.
(vi) To conduct inspections and guidance on emergency response in the city.
(vii) Other necessary controls are required by law.
Article 15 Governments should establish appropriate institutions responsible for emergency response in the current administrative area.
Section II Monitoring and early warning systems
Article 16 Monitoring and early warning of sudden public health incidents refers to systematic, systematic and long-term observation of the occurrence, impact factors of sudden public health incidents, and to appropriate preventive measures.
Article 17 establishes and improves monitoring and early warning systems at all levels of government. Monitoring and the establishment of early warning systems should be consistent with national standards.
Article 18 Monitoring and early warning institutions at all levels are guided by the leadership of the peer health sector and by the parent disease prevention control agencies.
The relevant sectors of Article 19 cooperate with the health sector monitoring of transport, shores, construction of work, agro-industries, mobile population pools and monitoring points.
The urban health sector has established a mechanism for cooperation with the entry testing of the Quarantine sector to facilitate the timely exchange of forecasting information.
Article 20 establishes an expert advisory board for emergencies at all levels of the health sector to assess monitoring information in the territories and in the surrounding areas, to identify the nature, extent, pre-supence, and to recommend appropriate preventive measures.
Article 21 is responsible for monitoring points and monitoring technical programmes and related day-to-day monitoring processes established by networks, developing monitoring plans, conducting epidemiological surveys, undertaking laboratory testing tasks, diagnosing the causes of illness or poisoning, scientific analysis, integrated evaluation monitoring data and forecasting of emergencies in a timely manner.
The type, number and monitoring content of the monitoring point is determined by the same-level disease prevention control body and is approved by the same health sector.
Article 2
Article 23 of the Community Health Services station and the Village Health Unit are responsible for monitoring and reporting on diseases among the people living in the community.
Article 24 monitoring points carry out disease monitoring and reporting under the monitoring programme; non-monitoring points should undertake related work as appropriate in the context of monitoring early warning.
Article 25 Health monitoring bodies conduct monitoring inspections under the law with regard to monitoring and early warning institutions, epidemiological surveillance, food poisoning and occupational diseases.
Section III Medical rescue system
Article 26 Governments at all levels should strengthen the network of emergency health services, improve the system of treatment for emergencies in rural and sea islands and enhance the capacity to deal with emergencies.
Article 27 states that the municipality has established a specialised hospital for infectious diseases and assumes a mandate for communicable diseases.
The urban health sector has designated more than a secondary integrated hospital to cater for food poisoning, occupational poisoning and group-specific diseases.
According to work needs, the urban health sector could temporarily designate other medical institutions to undertake commensurate work.
Article 28 of the Town Emergency Command Centre is responsible for the pre-school medical rescue command movement control process, as a trigger for a sudden incident rescue command.
Article 29 provides for the monitoring, screening and reporting of cases at all levels of medical institutions.
The appointment of a medical institution should establish an expert working group responsible for the observation of cases, suspected cases, clinical diagnosis of clinical cases, and for the processing of recommendations; the responsibility section, the doctor responsible for the implementation of the responsibility and reporting on developments in the treatment of patients.
Non-designated medical institutions treat patients on the ground, on the ground, on the ground, on the ground, and suspected patients on the ground, on a daily basis to report on developments in the treatment of cases.
Section IV Control systems
Article 33 Governments and their relevant sectors should establish and refine the emergency response control force for emergencies. The response team consists of disease prevention agencies, health monitoring bodies, public safety police officers, street communities.
The regular organization of training and performance by specialized agencies at all levels to deal with sudden events has continuously increased the capacity and level of response. Early detection, early reporting, isolation and early treatment of infectious diseases.
The following measures should be taken immediately when disease prevention control agencies identify or receive reports of emergencies:
(i) To arrive on the ground in a timely manner, to investigate the registration of patients or suspected patients and to conduct a case-by-case investigation.
(ii) Epidemiology surveys conducted in accordance with the relevant provisions, and medical observation where necessary.
(iii) Health treatment of places and goods outside medical institutions that are affected by infectious diseases or suspected communicable diseases, toxic chemicals, radioactive substances, and micro-organism.
(iv) A health evaluation opinion on sudden-onset events was presented to the health sector and was sent to health monitoring bodies.
In accordance with the relevant legislation, the health monitoring bodies have adopted administrative measures in the context of the assessment of health and the physical situation on the ground.
Local governments are required to take appropriate measures, and the health sector reports to the same-ranking government.
Article 33: Medical institutions perform the following duties:
(i) Execution of a first-spatient system of care for patients or suspected patients for any reason, and timely reporting on local disease prevention agencies.
(ii) Strict sanitation treatment of places, goods and levies contaminated by persons affected by infectious diseases within medical institutions or suspected of communicable diseases.
(iii) Distinguished treatment of the body of the patient or suspected patients killed in the medical institution.
(iv) Establish a safe referral system to prevent the spread of diseases.
Article 34, which is led by the Integrated Coastal Management Sector, will establish a collaborative mechanism for emergency response in the event of a sudden incident, in conjunction with external events, entry tests, sanitation, public safety inspections, customs, etc.
(i) Establish a two-way information briefing system. In the event of, or in the near future, the parties concerned brief each other.
(ii) Establish a system of mutual trust. In the context of the quarantine of persons who have been deported at the local level, it has been found that a sudden incident of a patient or a suspect is likely to be affected by the appropriate treatment measures and to inform the relevant sectors of the other party, the relevant authorities should be prepared for emergency preparedness.
(iii) Establish a system of identification of suspicious persons. Resistance stations have been established at the various shores with the necessary personnel and equipment to conduct epidemiological case surveys, preliminary inspections and initial diagnosis, and follow-up to municipal disease prevention control agencies and municipal emergency medical command control agencies; and to remove the disease.
(iv) Establish a system of custody of the health of transit personnel. Access to the quarantine sector provides health care for persons travelling to other countries or areas at the local level, and it is found that the patient or the suspect is subject to the law.
Article XV of the health sector establishes mechanisms for emergency response to sea and maritime emergencies, in conjunction with the Government of Sea Island, the transport sector, the maritime sector, the security sector, the border, fishing authorities, etc.
(i) The establishment of a health screening system for offshore personnel, as required. Health testing projects are set by the urban health sector according to needs.
(ii) Establish a system for the transfer of sick persons. When a sudden incident occurred, the relevant units or individuals should immediately report on the health sector, the local government and the relevant sectors, and health-care institutions should be able to move quickly to the field and to carry out health custody. The Government of the Sea is requesting vessels for the transfer of patients and suspected patients. Those vessels transit patients should be equipped with the necessary personnel and goods in accordance with the relevant provisions.
(iii) Establish emergency relief systems. When a vessel has been rescued, the maritime sector organizes the rescue of vessels and personnel and informs the relevant sectors, such as health.
Article XVI provides for the prevention of emergencies within their respective responsibilities.
The public security sector, within its mandate, assists medical, preventive and institutional institutions in the imposition of forced segregation measures, blockades of the sanitary area, assists the relevant sectors in the health quarantine of personnel, materials and transportation tools in access to the sanctuary area, setting checkpoints on the road, intercepting, inspecting vehicles and assisting in the delivery of transport sanitation.
Article 37 Urban Emergency Command Centres, Command Centre of the Municipal Public Security Agency, health monitoring and disease prevention agencies at all levels should establish an inter-active mechanism for emergency response.
Article 338 Street, Community and Residential (Leal) committees should enhance monitoring of access to local parameters, cooperate with the health sector in taking control measures, and find an unusual and timely reporting of local disease control agencies.
Section V Information systems
Article 39 establishes and improves urban, district, town (at streets), village emergency information networks to ensure access to information. The relevant sectors should strengthen collaboration to achieve information-sharing and increase efficiency.
Article 40 The information delivery system should make full use of public information platforms for resource sharing.
The information sender and the monitoring point could be consolidated to balance community health services and public health institutions.
In accordance with the division of labour, the disease prevention control agencies are responsible for collecting, analysing and analysing the dynamics and prevention, control of sudden incidents in the current administrative area, and preparing information on emergencies to the health sector.
The disease prevention control agencies have established the post-partum reporting system, which regularly sends information on vectors and poisonous surveillance.
Section VI
Article 42 establishes a contingency reserve at all levels for emergencies, reserve epidemiological surveys, isolation of communicable sources, medical care, on-site disposal, supervision of inspection, monitoring tests, health protection and related materiel, equipment, facilities, talents and talents.
The sectors such as UNCTAD, the development plan and health have developed contingency reserve plans based on their respective responsibilities, which have been approved.
Article 43
Article 44 Governments should strengthen the training of self-protection teams in relevant sectors, with protection equipment required by the epidemic.
Each user unit should pay attention to operational training for specialized technical personnel, strengthening health attendance, radiological protection, biochemical protection, and hygiene engineering.
Article 42 establishes a number of technical guidance groups in the health sector. The Group of Medical Rescue Steeres the diagnosis, treatment, medical dispersion and medical protection of patients; the Technical Steering Group on Prevention of Control guides in preventive controls such as epidemiological investigations, intoxication segregation and personal protection; the Technical Steering Group for the Study of Diseases, which guides the work of patients or production of environmental samples collected, transported, and testing of vectors or occupational hazards.
Article 46 of the city's scientific and technical authorities are responsible for the organization and coordination of scientific research activities of STI in relation to public health technologies; and the organization of health-care institutions, monitoring institutions and scientific research institutions in the city. The departments concerned should support and cooperate.
Article 47 strengthens market regulation and protects social order within their respective responsibilities.
Chapter III Prevention
Article 48 Eighteen governments, in line with the Government's emergency preparedness case, develop emergency preparedness cases for the current Government in response to emergencies.
Article 49, Health and related sectors have developed specific and sectoral emergency scenarios based on emergency response scenarios for the same-tier governments.
Article 50 Governments, as well as sectors such as health, should be revised in a timely manner on the basis of changes in emergencies and the problems identified in their implementation, supplementary emergency preparedness cases, specific and sectoral emergencies.
Article 50 should be used by all levels of government to prevent the occurrence of emergencies, in accordance with the relevant laws, regulations and regulations, in order to prevent the occurrence of emergencies, in accordance with the laws, regulations.
Article 52, Health and other relevant sectors, should educate the public on the legal, regulatory and emergency knowledge of emergencies and establish long-lasting mechanisms for the implementation of the National Health Education Campaign, the National Patriotic Health Movement, the National Campaign for Health, the All-Health Movement, the promotion of physical quality and the strengthening of preventive awareness and response capacity for emergencies.
Chapter IV report
Article 53 should establish an emergency reporting system at all levels of government and relevant sectors.
Cases, suspected cases have been introduced and the Zero reporting system.
Article 54 designates health-care institutions at all levels to send information on emergencies.
Article 55 monitoring bodies, health agencies and relevant units found one of the following cases to be reported to the host health sector within two hours; the health sector receiving reports should be reported to the people's Government within two hours, while reporting to the parent health sector and the Ministry of Health.
(i) The occurrence or possible occurrence of communicable diseases.
(ii) The occurrence or detection of the disease of unknown causes.
(iii) The occurrence of communicable diseases and the loss of toxicity.
(iv) The occurrence or possible occurrence of significant food and occupational poisoning.
Any unit and individual found HIV, pneumrlen, in the Copyrick, in the Amphetary, and other communicable diseases incorporated by the Ministry of Health in statutory management or suspected of poisoning and occupational poisoning, should be reported promptly to local disease prevention agencies. The reported disease prevention control agencies report to the health sector at this level and to the parent disease prevention agencies.
Any unit or individual may not conceal, debrief, false or disguised others to conceal, debrief, falsely report.
Article 57 Governments and the health sector that have received reports at all levels of the report, in accordance with the provisions of this approach, should immediately organize a force to verify, validate, take the necessary controls and report on investigations in a timely manner.
Article 58 departments at all levels of government concerned that cases where a sudden incident may be triggered should be communicated to the same Government's health sector in a timely manner.
Article 59 sends information on sudden incidents to the attention of confidentiality and protects the right to privacy of patients and close contact.
Article sixtieth establishes a system of reporting of sudden-on-cident incidents, and the publication of a unified report on incidents and telephones.
Any unit and person have an obligation to report to all levels of government and its relevant departments on the concealment of the incident, to the superior Government and its relevant departments the right to report to local governments and their relevant departments that do not carry out emergency response duties or do not carry out their duties in accordance with the provisions. Governments at all levels and their relevant departments should be immediately organized to investigate them.
Chapter V
Section I
Article 63 distinguishs from four levels, namely, preparatory, grade, secondary and tertiary levels, in accordance with the level of impact on the health and safety of public life.
Article 62 states as a pre-emption event:
(i) In other areas, there may be transmissions in the current administrative region of HIV/AIDS, pneumlenium and other infectious diseases that are covered by the Ministry of Health in statutory management, but there is no clinical diagnosis or only suspected cases.
(ii) The loss, leakage and theft of radioactive sources or poisoning in other areas may be invested in the current administrative region.
(iii) In other areas, there have been a number of incidents of poisoning or occupational poisoning due to food use or exposure to a chemical in the near future, but there are no reports of poisoning among groups.
(iv) In the next 96 hours, water sources in the city may be contaminated.
(v) In other areas, there may be a risk of occurrence or transmission.
Article 63 states as one of the following cases:
(i) In other areas, the incidence of infectious diseases under article 62 provides that the current city has been screened for entry into sexual clinical diagnostic cases or a sharp increase in the epidemic in other regions, with the apparent increase in the current administrative region.
(ii) The loss, leakage, theft and theft of a large number of low-live radioactive sources or toxic chemicals, and the absence of casualties reports.
(iii) In the short term, there have been a number of incidents of poisoning or occupational poisoning in a particular region (communication), schools, factories or other organizations, where the incidence of the population is not higher than the normal average, with no deaths.
(iv) In the next 72 hours, the current city's water source may be contaminated.
(v) In the short term, there is no apparent difference in the incidence of a population with similar illnesses, with the exception of a population of a region (communication), schools, factories or other organizations.
Article 60 quater is one of the following cases:
(i) Article 62 stipulates that infectious diseases have been transmitted in the city and that sexually transmitted cases or stoves have occurred, including clinical diagnosis cases and suspected cases.
(ii) The loss, leakage, theft, injury or poisonation of a large number of medium-sized sources of radioactivity or poisoning.
(iii) In the short term, there are bacteria, chemical food poisonous or occupational poisoning in a particular region (in the village) at the same time or at the same time as in the rest of the other organization, with a high rate of morbidity among the population at the normal level and with serious cases.
(iv) In the next 48 hours, the current city's water source may be contaminated.
(v) In the short term, there are a number of unaccountable diseases in a particular region (farm), schools, factories or other organizations, where the incidence of the population is significantly higher than similar diseases and there are serious cases.
Article 55 is one of the following cases:
(i) The outbreak or prevalence of infectious diseases as set out in article 62 of this city.
(ii) The loss, leakage, theft, theft, and the injury or poisoning of many people.
(iii) In a region (communication), schools, factories or other organizations, in the short term, there are bacteria, chemical food poisonous or occupational poisoning incidents, with the exception of the normal level of morbidity and multiple deaths.
(iv) In the next 24 hours, the current city's water source may be contaminated.
(v) In a region (communication), schools, factories or other organizations, in the short term, multiple unaccounted for by groups, where the incidence of the population is significantly higher than similar diseases and there are multiple deaths.
The above-ranking municipalities may make appropriate adjustments based on actual work needs.
Section II Emergency response
In the aftermath of a sudden incident, the Ministry of Command launched an emergency preparedness response based on the level of a sudden incident.
Article 67 Emergency response was announced by the Ministry of Command that a four-tier response is divided according to the level of occurrence.
During the preparatory response, the health and related sectors should undertake the following:
(i) Following a sudden incident at the preparatory level, the health sector and monitoring points at all levels have strengthened monitoring, analysis, research and assessment, reporting on the events to the Ministry.
(ii) Preparations for personnel, materials, equipment, etc. at all levels.
(iii) In response to possible events, universal access to the knowledge of possible incidents and the empowerment of communities, rural, family and personal disease prevention.
(iv) In the event of contamination of drinking water sources, the health and water sectors have jointly strengthened water monitoring and informed the relevant units to prepare them accordingly.
(v) Where necessary, emergency vaccinations for persons vulnerable to infection or damage, preventive pharmacies, protection of groups, suspension of work, suspension of production, etc.
During the response at the level of Article 69, the chain of command and the associated units were based on the preparatory response:
(i) Health institutions and other relevant units have found sudden events, reporting to the disease prevention agencies in the region in the most rapid manner within two hours (the city area directly reports the urban disease prevention control centres); and the disease prevention control agencies report the most rapid communication to the parent disease prevention control agencies and the same health administration after initial verification of the reporting content.
(ii) The disease prevention control body immediately dispatched its personnel to the site and informed the health oversight bodies that, in response to the nature of the sudden incident, the necessary control measures to prevent the spread of epidemics (therapeutic) and poisoning; conduct epidemiological investigations, sampling tests in a timely manner and, where necessary, send samples to high-level surveillance bodies; strengthen monitoring and health education and closely watch the dynamics of the events.
(iii) Medical institutions need to be able to respond strictly to patients' treatment, with the design of hospitals for persons affected by infectious diseases or persons suspected to be affected by infectious diseases, while at the same time being physically dispersed and the personal protection of medical personnel.
(iv) The health sector of each region immediately designates a medical institution to receive patients; the urban health sector, in accordance with emergencies and requests from the regional health sector, is reasonably equipped with emergency support, such as the transfer of technology, personnel, goods, funds, etc., and immediately organized the Group of Experts to identify first cases on the ground.
(v) Measures such as storage of water sources may occur when water contamination occurs.
(vi) In the case of sudden-onset incidents arising from drug trafficking, man-made destruction and safe production accidents, the health sector, in reporting to the current Government on the health status of the recipients, promptly informs the sectors such as public safety, security production monitoring to identify the facts of the incident.
During the second-tier response, the chain of command and the associated units were given the following work on the basis of response at the level:
(i) The relevant sector at the district level, in accordance with the needs of medical treatment, organizes the rescue of patients, mobilizes all local medical institutions for the preparation of patients, control the adverse health impacts of the events on the population; and, in the event of the epidemic, the health sector should make recommendations to the same Government for the delineation and implementation of the sanctuary areas; and health education efforts at streets, town and community organizations.
(ii) Upon request from relevant sectors at the municipal level to mobilize medical institutions for the treatment of patients, in accordance with the number, severity and district-level sectors affected by sudden events; emergency support for technical, personnel, materials, funds for regions and units severely affected; and, where necessary, to inform the surrounding areas of progress in the investigation and processing of emergencies; and, where necessary, support for technical or equipment requests to the superior authorities.
(iii) In cases where water contamination may occur, emergency water systems are launched and water is planned.
During the third-tier response period, all sectors of the city and associated units were able to work on the basis of a secondary response:
(i) Conduct a wide range of social awareness education to inform all members of the city about the main situation of the events, and to follow up on emergency response measures in the relevant sectors.
(ii) Mobilization of funds and materials required for emergency response.
(iii) The necessary quarantine measures for infectious diseases.
(iv) In cases where water pollution may or has occurred, urgent closure of the present city's water source is prohibited from operating, lobbying, etc. in waters that may be contaminated.
No new cases have occurred within a certain period of time in article 72, and the Ministry of Command may declare this response closed.
After the end of the response, the various components of the command and the relevant units of the Ministry were briefed and the relevant branches of the Government were reported on 7 days.
Section III
Article 73 Preparatory Emergency Profiles commenced with the consent of the urban health sector, with the consent of the sector's health sector, with the approval of the Government of the District, and the announcement by the Regional Command.
The above-level emergency presupposes were launched by the municipal health sector with the consent of the provincial health sector, with the approval of the municipal government and the announcement of the municipal command. Except as otherwise provided in the legislation.
As a result of the incident, the health sector should immediately organize an expert's comprehensive assessment of the occurrence of a sudden incident, prejudicing the types of sudden-onset events and suggesting whether to initiate a contingency advance.
Article 75
Article 76 National, provincial and related departments designated professional technical bodies, with valid evidence of entry into the area of investigation, sampling, technical analysis and testing, and technical guidance on emergency response processing, and cooperation between the relevant units and individuals shall not be denied.
Section IV
Article 77 Medical institutions and their medical personnel should have diagnostic standards, treatment programmes for diseases, treatment of sexually transmitted patients or persons suspected to be affected by infectious diseases, which should guide the adoption of drug segregation measures in accordance with the relevant technical protocols or work.
Article 78 should provide medical care and on-site assistance to persons affected by emergencies and write a detailed and complete record of the disease;
The transfer of health institutions, the treatment of infectious diseases and the conduct of studies must strictly implement regulatory systems, operational protocols, prevent the spread of sexually transmitted infections, in hospitals, laboratory infections and sexually transmitted microbis.
Health institutions should take medical observation measures against patients who are closely exposed to infectious diseases, and those who are closely exposed to infectious diseases should cooperate.
Medical institutions should report on the state of disease prevention institutions in accordance with the law. The reported disease prevention control agencies should immediately investigate the persons at risk and inform the health oversight bodies of the necessary controls as required.
Article 79 requires the treatment of isolation, medical observation measures, persons suspected to be patients and patients with communicable diseases in close contact with the health sector and the agencies concerned, and the denial of cooperation by public security agencies.
Section V
Article 810 schools, childcare institutions, factories should strengthen health care and health education for teachers and employees, provide for indoor and external sanitation, strengthen sports exercise, guide preventive measures in accordance with the relevant provisions and work, and take the necessary measures to eliminate the sources of transmission, cut off the means of transmission, protect vulnerable populations; units that commit poison or occupational poison in food must stop the use of the facilities and adapt to the health sector's observations.
Article 81 ensures the right functioning of sanitation facilities in all public places, enhances the custody of workers and the ventilation, cleaning, poisoning, and implements the relevant provisions of the legislation and guidelines for disease prevention.
In accordance with the provisions of the State Department's Health Administration, patients suspected of infectious diseases should be informed in the most expeditious manner of the parties' stopping points and reporting to the operating units of transport instruments. The first-party terminals and operating units of the transport tool should report immediately to the administrative authorities of the Transport Toolkill Unit and to the Government's health administration authorities of the local population.
Upon receipt of the report on the condition of transport instruments, the health sector in the city should immediately organize medical treatment measures, such as medical care, freight forwarding and intoxication.
The patients who are closely contacted in the transport instruments that are under way in this city are subject to control under the law by a WHO or airport where the transport tool is stopped.
Persons involved in crossings and exits, transportation instruments, goods, containers, luxury, mail kits, etc. require emergency response measures in response to the provisions of the National Health Quarantine Act, administrative regulations, which require local treatment or medical observation to be sent to designated medical institutions.
Article 83 provides for the rioting of infectious diseases and the flow of persons in the pandemic, and the relevant government departments and units should be able to prevent and implement health-related measures; for persons affected by infectious diseases and persons suspected to be affected by infectious diseases, to carry out local segregation, observation and local treatment.
Chapter VI Legal responsibility
Article 84 has one of the following circumstances and is governed by law by law by the executive disposition of the principal leadership or the principal head or the removal of office; resulting in the dissemination, epidemic or other grave consequences for the health of the public in society; the administrative disposition of the offence; and the criminal accountability of the law:
(i) Governments at all levels and their health sectors do not carry out reporting responsibilities in accordance with the provisions of this approach, concealing, debriefing, false reporting.
(ii) Governments at all levels and their relevant departments do not complete the production, supply, transport reserves of supplies, such as facilities, equipment, medicines and medical equipment that are required for emergency response to emergencies.
(iii) In the aftermath of a sudden incident, Governments at all levels and their relevant departments do not cooperate in the investigation of the relevant sectors of the superior government or otherwise impede and interfere with the investigation.
Article 82 is one of the following cases, which is being rectified by the principal Government or by a superior government order, to communicate criticisms, warnings; administrative disposition of the principal holder, responsible supervisors and other responsible persons, in accordance with the law; causing the spread, epidemic or other serious consequences for the health of the public; administrative removal of infectious diseases in accordance with the law; and criminal liability:
(i) Health and other relevant sectors at all levels play a role in the investigation, control, medical treatment, negligence, negligence and malfeasing of duties.
(ii) The relevant authorities at all levels refuse to perform emergency response duties.
Article 86 contains one of the following acts by the health-care agency, which is responsible for correcting, communicating criticisms and warnings; giving downgrading to the principal, responsible supervisors and other responsible persons in accordance with the law; and causing the spread, epidemic or other serious consequences for the health of the public, which constitute a crime and hold criminal responsibility under the law:
(i) No reporting function is performed in accordance with the provisions of this approach. Excise, debriefing or falsely.
(ii) Execution of control measures in a timely manner, in accordance with the provisions of this approach.
(iii) Not to carry out monitoring functions for the occurrence of sudden incidents in accordance with the provisions of this approach.
(iv) To deny access to patients.
(v) To refrain from disobedience to the movement control of the Ministry of Emergency Response in the case of sudden incidents.
Article 87-related units and individuals have one of the following acts in the emergency response process of the incident, and the responsible persons concerned have been treated administratively by law:
(i) Exhibition, debriefing or false reporting, impeding the delivery of staff functions for emergency response.
(ii) To deny access to sudden-onset events by specialized technical agencies designated by the health sector or other relevant departments.
(iii) No collaboration with investigations, sampling, technical analysis and testing.
Article 82, in response to a sudden incident, is one of the following cases, which constitutes a violation of the management of the security sector, punishable by the public security authorities and constitute a crime and criminal liability under the law:
(i) disrupt the order of government organs, medical units.
(ii) Disturbation of public places such as vehicle stations, terminals and air ports.
(iii) Constraints or distortions of facts, intentionally dispersing rumours or inciting other ways to disrupt social order.
(iv) Restructuring and creating confusion.
(v) There is no reason to intercept vehicles or to impose a vehicle on the proper operation of the vehicle.
(vi) There is no discouraging and forced movement in areas prohibited by public security authorities.
(vii) Non-recruitment, denial, obstruction of forced segregation, retention and closure of the epidemic.
Article 89, in the event of a sudden incident, dispersed rumours, price rises, royalties, deceives, disrupted social order, market order and punished by law by the relevant authorities; constituted criminality by law.
Chapter VII
Article 90 of this approach is interpreted by the Government of the people of the city of jewell.
Article 90 of this approach is implemented effective 1 August 2003.