TABLE I. Provisional cases of infrequently reported notifiable diseases (<1,000 cases reported during the preceding year), United States,
week ending March 13, 2010 (WEEK 10)*


Disease Total cases reported for previous years
Current
week
Cum
2010
5-year
weekly
average
2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 States reporting cases
during current week (Count)
 Anthrax - - 0 1 - 1 1 -  
 Botulism, total - 7 2 100 145 144 165 135  
 foodborne - - 0 11 17 32 20 19  
 infant - 6 2 65 109 85 97 85  
 other(wound & unspecified) - 1 0 24 19 27 48 31  
 Brucellosis 3 11 2 113 80 131 121 120 ME (1 ), FL (1 ), CA (1 )
 Chancroid - 15 1 46 25 23 33 17  
 Cholera - - - 8 5 7 9 8  
 Cyclosporiasis § 2 14 1 128 139 93 137 543 NY (1 ), FL (1 )
 Diphtheria - - - - - - - -  
 Domestic arboviral diseases §, ¶ :                  
 California serogroup virus disease - - 0 56 62 55 67 80  
 Eastern equine encephalitis virus disease - - - 4 4 4 8 21  
 Powassan virus disease - - - 6 2 7 1 1  
 St. Louis encephalitis virus disease - - 0 12 13 9 10 13  
 Western equine encephalitis virus disease - - - - - - - -  
 Haemophilus influenzae **,
invasive disease (age <5 yrs):
                 
 serotype b - 2 1 27 30 22 29 9  
 nonserotype b 1 27 5 217 244 199 175 135 OK (1 )
 unknown serotype - 51 4 231 163 180 179 217  
 Hansen disease § 1 8 1 75 80 101 66 87 FL (1 )
 Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome § - 1 0 13 18 32 40 26  
 Hemolytic uremic syndrome, post-diarrheal § 1 20 3 232 330 292 288 221 CA (1 )
 HIV infection, pediatric (age <13 yrs) †† - - 3 - - - - 380  
 Influenza-associated pediatric mortality §, §§ 2 41 4 360 90 77 43 45 OK (1 ), TX (1 )
 Listeriosis 5 79 9 798 759 808 884 896 NY (1 ), NC (2 ), TN (1 ), CA (1 )
 Measles ¶¶ - 3 1 65 140 43 55 66  
 Meningococcal disease, invasive *** :                  
 A,C,Y, and W-135 3 40 10 287 330 325 318 297 FL (1 ), CO (2 )
 serogroup B - 21 5 147 188 167 193 156  
 other serogroup - 2 1 24 38 35 32 27  
 unknown serogroup 4 70 17 480 616 550 651 765 MO (1 ), FL (1 ), TX (1 ), CA (1 )
 Mumps 43 535 26 1,666 454 800 6,584 314 NY (38 ), MI (1 ), MN (1 ), NE (1 ), TN (1 ), CO (1 )
 Novel influenza A infection virus ††† - - 0 43,771 2 4 NN NN  
 Plague - - 0 8 3 7 17 8  
 Poliomyelitis, paralytic - - - - - - - 1  
 Polio virus infection, nonparalytic § - - - - - - NN NN  
 Psittacosis § - 1 0 9 8 12 21 16  
 Q fever total §, §§§: 1 10 2 100 120 171 169 136  
 acute - 6 1 83 106 - - -  
 chronic 1 4 0 17 14 - - - WA (1 )
 Rabies, human - - - 4 2 1 3 2  
 Rubella ¶¶¶ - 1 0 3 16 12 11 11  
 Rubella, congenital syndrome - - 0 1 - - 1 1  
 SARS CoV §, **** - - - - - - - -  
 Smallpox § - - - - - - - -  
 Streptococcal toxic-shock syndrome § - 18 5 140 157 132 125 129  
 Syphilis, congenital (age <1 yr) †††† - 12 7 319 431 430 349 329  
 Tetanus - - 0 16 19 28 41 27  
 Toxic-shock syndrome (staphylococcal) § - 13 2 74 71 92 101 90  
 Trichinellosis - - 0 11 39 5 15 16  
 Tularemia - 2 0 89 123 137 95 154  
 Typhoid fever 4 58 6 350 449 434 353 324 GA (1 ), CA (3 )
 Vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus § - 8 1 73 63 37 6 2  
 Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus § - - - 1 - 2 1 3  
 Vibriosis (non-cholera Vibrio species infections) § 3 24 2 710 588 549 NN NN TX (1 ), AZ (1 ), WA (1 )
 Viral Hemorrhagic Fever §§§§ - - - NN NN NN NN NN  
 Yellow fever - - - - - - - -  
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-: No reported cases    N: Not reportable    NN: Not Nationally Notifiable    Cum: Cumulative year-to-date counts.
* Case counts for reporting years 2009 and 2010 are provisional and subject to change. For further information on interpretation of these data, see
http://wwwn.cdc.gov/nndss/document/ProvisionalNationaNotifiableDiseasesSurveillanceData20100927.pdf.
† Calculated by summing the incidence counts for the current week, the 2 weeks preceding the current week, and the 2 weeks following the current week, for a total of 5 preceding years. The total sum of incident cases is then divided by 25 weeks. Additional information is available at http://wwwn.cdc.gov/nndss/document/5yearweeklyaverage.pdf.
§ Not reportable in all states. Data from states where the condition is not reportable are excluded from this table, except starting in 2007 for the Arboviral diseases and influenza-associated pediatic mortality, and in 2003 for SARS-CoV. Reporting exceptions are available at http://wwwn.cdc.gov/nndss/document/SRCA_FINAL_REPORT_2006-2010.xlsx.
¶ Includes both neuroinvasive and nonneuroinvasive. Updated weekly from reports to the Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases, National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric Diseases (ArboNET Surveillance). Data for West Nile virus are available in Table II.
** Data for H. influenzae (all ages, all serotypes) are available in Table II.
†† Updated monthly from reports to the Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention. Implementation of HIV reporting influences the number of cases reported. Updates of pediatric HIV data have been temporarily suspended until upgrading of the national HIV/ AIDS surveillance data management system is completed. Data for HIV/AIDS, when available, are displayed in Table IV, which appears quarterly.
§§ Updated weekly from reports to the Influenza Division, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. Please refer to the MMWR publication for weekly updates to the footnote for this condition.
¶¶ Please refer to the MMWR publication for weekly updates to the footnote for this condition.
*** Data for meningococcal disease (all serogroups) are available in Table II.
††† CDC discontinued reporting of individual confirmed and probable cases of 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) virus infections on July 24, 2009. CDC will report the total number of 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) hospitalizations and deaths weekly on the CDC H1N1 influenza website http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu. In addition, three cases of novel influenza A virus infections, unrelated to the 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) virus, were reported to CDC during 2009.
§§§ In 2009, Q fever acute and chronic reporting categories were recognized as a result of revisions to the Q fever case definition. Prior to that time, case counts were not differentiated with respect to acute and chronic Q fever cases.
¶¶¶ Please refer to the MMWR publication for weekly updates to the footnote for this condition.
**** Updated weekly from reports to the Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric Diseases.
†††† Updated weekly from reports to the Division of STD Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention.
§§§§ Please refer to the MMWR publication for weekly updates to the footnote for this condition. See Table II for Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever.

National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS)

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