The Office of Communicable Disease Epidemiology (OCDE) is responsible for statewide surveillance and investigation of more than 60 of Washington State's approximately 80 notifiable conditions, as described in Washington Administrative Code 246-101. Our activities include:
- Tracking of foodborne or waterborne diseases, zoonotic and vectorborne diseases, vaccine preventable diseases, tuberculosis, healthcare-associated disease, highly drug resistant agents, influenza, COVID-19 case investigations, and refugee health screenings
- Support for local health jurisdictions in the investigation of individual cases and outbreaks of communicable diseases
- Collection, analysis, and dissemination of communicable disease information to identify disease trends, including emerging infections
- Education and training for public health and healthcare professionals on communicable disease prevention and control
- Planning and response for public health emergencies involving communicable diseases
OCDE Programs
- Foodborne, Waterborne, and Enteric Disease
- Healthcare Associated Infections and Antimicrobial Resistance
- Molecular Epidemiology
- Non-Healthcare Congregate Settings
- Refugee and Immigrant Health
- Tuberculosis
- Vaccine-Preventable Disease
- Zoonotic and Vector-borne Disease
Notifiable Conditions
A list of Washington State's notifiable conditions can be found on the notifiable conditions page.
Data
- Annual Surveillance Reports
- CRE Surveillance
- epiTRENDS
- Influenza Surveillance Data
- Respiratory Illness Data Dashboard
- Tuberculosis Data and Reports
Contact Information
Washington State Department of Health
Communicable Disease Epidemiology
1610 NE 150th Street, MS: K17-9
Shoreline, WA 98155
Email the Communicable Disease Epidemiology program for more information (CommDisEpi@doh.wa.gov).
Consultation and technical assistance
Local Health Jurisdictions in Washington State can request technical assistance:
- 206-418-5500: Phone (24-hour contact)
- 206-364-1060: Secure FAX
- 1-877-539-4344: 24-hour contact (inside Washington State only)
Washington residents may contact their local health jurisdictions for assistance.