DOH Logo linking to the DOH Home Page

Notifiable Conditions logo

Blue Line Image
You are here: DOH Home » Notifiable Conditions » Lyme Disease Index Search | Employees
 Site Directory:    Notifiable Conditions: Lyme Disease
Other links concerning Notifiable Conditions
Posters
Associated Programs

PDF documents require the free Acrobat Reader. Click here to download a copy.

Access Washington Logo linking to Access Washington Home Page

     

Lyme Disease


Cause: Spiral shaped bacterium (spirochete) Borrelia burgdorferi.

Illness and treatment: There are skin and systemic “flu-like” symptoms, such as fatigue, headache, fever, and muscle and joint aches. The classic symptom is a target-shaped (bull’s-eye) rash. Joint, nervous system, or heart complications can occur.

Sources: Only certain hard tick species transmit Lyme disease from the rodent or deer reservoirs. In the Pacific coastal United States, the western blacklegged (or deer) tick (Ixodes pacificus) is the primary vector. These ticks live in heavily-forested or dense brushy areas, not open areas. It is likely these ticks must attach for at least 24 hours to transmit the disease.

Prevention: During outdoor activities in endemic areas avoid tick bites by wearing appropriate clothing and using repellents. Check the body for ticks. If bitten by a tick, be alert for "flu-like" symptoms or rash over the next month. If symptoms develop, contact a health care provider.

Recent Washington trends: Each year there are 7 to 23 reports. Most Washington cases are the result of a tick bite out of state. The few endemic cases have tick exposures predominantly on the west side of the Cascade Mountains, reflecting the distribution of the Ixodes ticks.

2010: Sixteen (16) cases were reported; only 2 had in-state exposure in Klickitat and Okanogan counties.

Purpose of Reporting and Surveillance

  • To determine the incidence of Lyme disease, the degree of endemicity, and potential risk of contracting Lyme disease in Washington State
  • To identify endemic geographic areas within Washington State
  • To educate people about how to reduce their risk of infection

Legal Reporting Requirements

  • Health care providers: notifiable to local health jurisdiction within 3 business days
  • Health care facilities: notifiable to local health jurisdiction within 3 business days
  • Laboratories: Borrelia burgdorferi notifiable to local health jurisdiction within 2 business days; specimen submission is on request only
  • Veterinarians: animal cases notifiable to Washington State Department of Agriculture on a monthly basis (see: http://apps.leg.wa.gov/WAC/default.aspx?cite=16-70)
  • Local health jurisdictions: notifiable to the Washington State Department of Health (DOH) Communicable Disease Epidemiology (CDE) within 7 days of case investigation completion or summary information required within 21 days

Last update
December 2011

Lyme Disease Resources

General Information
Case Definition
(PDF Format)
CDC Fact Sheet
(Web Format)
Lyme Disease Incidence Rates
(PDF Format)
Reporting Forms
Lyme Disease Reporting Form
(PDF Format)
Public Health and Health Care
Surveillance and Reporting Guidelines
(PDF Format)

DOH Home | Access Washington | Privacy Notice | Disclaimer/Copyright Information

Washington State Department of Health
Communicable Disease Epidemiology
MS: K17-9, 1610 NE 150th Street
Shoreline, WA 98155

Consultation and technical assistance are available to local health jurisdictions in Washington State:
Phone (206) 418-5500

FAX (206) 418-5515

24-hour contact (inside Washington State only)  1-877-539-4344

Washington residents can contact their local health jurisdictions for assistance


Send inquires about DOH and its programs to the Health Consumer Assistance Office
Comments or questions regarding this Fact Sheet? Send us an e-mail.