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  2. Diseases and Conditions
  3. Reporting Q Fever (Coxiella Burnetii)
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Infectious Disease Reporting

  • Infectious Disease Reporting Home
    • Reportable Diseases
  • Methods of Reporting
    • Report Immediately by Telephone
    • Phone Reporting
    • Report Forms
      • Yellow Card
    • Order Reporting Forms
  • Persons Required to Report
  • Submitting Clinical Materials
  • Reporting Rule
    • Reportable Disease Poster
    • Disease Reporting and HIPAA
    • Amendment to Rules

Related Topics

  • Annual Summary of Disease Activity
  • Minnesota Electronic Disease Surveillance System (MEDSS)
  • Infectious Diseases A-Z
  • Reporting Blood Lead Test Results

Infectious Disease Reporting

  • Infectious Disease Reporting Home
    • Reportable Diseases
  • Methods of Reporting
    • Report Immediately by Telephone
    • Phone Reporting
    • Report Forms
      • Yellow Card
    • Order Reporting Forms
  • Persons Required to Report
  • Submitting Clinical Materials
  • Reporting Rule
    • Reportable Disease Poster
    • Disease Reporting and HIPAA
    • Amendment to Rules

Related Topics

  • Annual Summary of Disease Activity
  • Minnesota Electronic Disease Surveillance System (MEDSS)
  • Infectious Diseases A-Z
  • Reporting Blood Lead Test Results
Contact Info
Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Prevention and Control Division
651-201-5414
IDEPC Comment Form

Contact Info

Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Prevention and Control Division
651-201-5414
IDEPC Comment Form

Reporting Q Fever 
(Coxiella burnetii)

On this page:
What to report
How to report
Submitting clinical materials
Who is required to report
More about infectious disease reporting
More about Q Fever 

What to report

Q Fever (Coxiella burnetii) must be reported to MDH immediately 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Case definition

  • CDC: Q Fever Case Definitions
    Case definition from CDC's National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System (NNDSS) for Q Fever.

How to report Q Fever

  • Call 651-201-5414 or 877-676-5414 immediately to report Q Fever. 
    24-7 Phone Reporting
    This disease must be reported immediately by phone 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Submitting clinical materials

For Q Fever, submission of clinical materials (isolate, if available) to MDH is required by rule.

  • Clinical Materials 
    Clinical materials must be submitted according to these guidelines.

Who is required to report

  • Health care practitioners (health care facilities, medical laboratories, and in certain circumstances veterinarians and veterinary medical laboratories) are required to report disease to the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) under Minnesota state law.
    • Unless previously reported, every licensed health care provider who provides care to any patient who has, is suspected of having, or has died from a reportable disease is required to report.
  • Any person in charge of any institution, school, child care facility, or camp is also required to report disease to MDH.
     
  • Persons Required to Report Disease
    More information about who is required to report disease.

More about infectious disease reporting

  • Infectious Disease Reporting
    Find out which infectious diseases must be reported by law in Minnesota, who is required to report diseases, how each disease can be reported, and download the appropriate forms.

More about Q Fever

  • Q Fever
    Information from the CDC on Q Fever.
     
  • Q Fever: Annual Summary of Reportable Diseases
    The Minnesota Department of Health collects information on infectious diseases for the purposes of determining disease impact, assessing trends in disease occurrence, characterizing affected populations, prioritizing control efforts, and evaluating prevention strategies, and reports statistics annually. Note: There are no listings for years in which there were no cases reported. The annual summary archives available on the web go back to 1997.
Tags
  • qfever
Last Updated: 08/20/2025

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