Human The first policies of mandatory notifiable disease originated a long time ago in France, while exact times are unclear we know that at the end of the 18th century Plague was a highly enforced notifiable disease. The current list of notifiable diseases is written in the
Code de la santé publique Article D3113-6 and
Article D3113-7 (last revision has been made in 2012), it contains 36 diseases : 34 infectious ones and 2 non-infectious disease directly linked to the environment (
Lead poisoning and
Mesothelioma). Notifications of both the disease and the distribution of specific medicine are made to a regional desk governmental agency called
Agence régionale de santé by : • Physician and Biologists, both in public or in private workplaces, • Physician controllers
(MISP) and Administratives civil-servant from
Directions départementales des affaires sanitaires et sociales (DDASS), • Epidemiologists from the
Institut de veille sanitaire (InVS), • Drugs sellers. Anonymous records are then used by the government health-insurance system. Ill people must cure them and in many case are put in quarantine.
Animal Only infectious diseases are notifiable to the authorities. The complete list can be found in the
Article L. 223-22 du code rural, it is updated with every new entry on
World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) lists A and B and with European Union mandatory lists. == New Zealand ==