(a)
Health personnel.
The camp operator shall submit the name of the designated
camp health director to supervise health and sanitation. Such director may be a
physician, nurse practitioner, physician assistant, registered nurse, licensed
practical nurse, emergency medical technician, or other person acceptable to
the permit-issuing official. At a children's overnight camp, the camp health
director shall be on-site. At a summer day camp or traveling summer day camp,
the camp health director shall be available as specified in the camp's approved
safety plan. If not on-site, the camp health director shall designate an
assistant as specified in the camp's approved safety plan.
(1) Camp health director. The camp health
director or designee(s) shall possess:
(i) a
current certificate in an acceptable first aid training program as defined in
section
7-2.2(m)
of this Subpart; and
(ii) a current
certificate in an acceptable cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training
program as defined in section
7-2.2(n)
of this Subpart.
(2)
Additional first aid and CPR-certified staff. First aid and CPR-certified staff
shall be on-site to respond to medical emergencies and assist the camp health
director, as detailed in the camp's approved safety plan. Staff possessing
current certifications in first aid and CPR, as described in paragraph (1) of
this subdivision, shall be available as follows:
(i) At a children's overnight camp, in
addition to the camp health director (or designee[s]) possessing these
certifications:
(a) one staff member for each
200 campers shall possess a current first aid certificate; and
(b) one staff member for each 200 campers
shall possess a current CPR certificate. Where a camp's qualified aquatics
staff remain on-site and area available to respond to emergencies, they may be
counted toward meeting this CPR requirement.
(ii) At a summer day camp or a traveling
summer day camp:
(a) one on-site staff member
for each 200 campers shall possess a current first aid certificate. The first
aid certified camp health director or designee may be counted toward meeting
this first aid requirement. If only one first aid certified staff member is
required, and this person is absent, a similarly certified first aid certified
staff member shall be on-site to meet this first aid requirement.
(b) In addition to the camp health director
or designee, one staff member for each 200 campers shall possess a current CPR
certificate. Where a camp's qualified aquatics staff remain on-site and are
available to respond to emergencies, they may be counted toward meeting this
CPR requirement.
(b) An overnight camp shall be provided with
an infirmary having hot and cold flowing water, examining room, isolation and
convalescent space, bathroom with flush toilets and showers and medical
supplies or have alternate provisions for infirmary services included in the
camp safety plan. Summer day camps and children's traveling summer day camps
shall provide a holding area reasonably satisfactory to the permit-issuing
official for all ill or injured children.
(c)
(1) A
current confidential medical history, including the child's immunization record
which shall include immunization dates against diphtheria, haemophilus
influenza type b, hepatitis b, measles, mumps, poliomyelitis, rubella, tetanus
and varicella (chicken pox), shall be kept on file for every camper and updated
annually. The camper's and staff's family or other responsible person's name,
address and telephone to contact during an emergency shall be kept on
file.
(2) An overnight camp shall
provide parents/guardians of campers attending camp for seven or more
consecutive nights with written information about meningococcal meningitis and
with a copy of an immunization response form that has been approved by the
State Commissioner of Health.
(i) The written
information must include:
(a) a description of
meningococcal meningitis and means of transmission;
(b) the benefits, risks and effectiveness of
immunization; and
(c) the
availability and estimated cost of immunization, including an indication of
whether or not the camp offers meningococcal meningitis immunization
services.
(ii) The
immunization response form must be submitted annually, kept on file at camp,
document that the parent/guardian has received and reviewed the meningococcal
meningitis information and certifies that either:
(a) the camper has been immunized against
meningococcal meningitis within the past 10 years; or
(b) the parent or guardian understands the
risk of meningococcal meningitis and the benefits of immunization, and has
decided that the camper will not obtain immunization against meningococcal
meningitis.
(d) All camper and
staff injuries, illnesses and reportable diseases shall be reported to the camp
health director and recorded in the medical log. All camper and staff injuries
or illnesses which result in death or which require resuscitation, admission to
a hospital or the administration of epinephrine, camper and staff exposures to
animals potentially infected with rabies, camper injuries to the eye, head,
neck or spine which require referral to a hospital or other facility for
medical treatment, camper injuries where the victim sustains second or third
degree burns to five percent or more of the body, camper injuries which involve
bone fractures or dislocations, camper lacerations requiring sutures, camper
physical or sexual abuse allegations and all camper and staff illnesses
suspected of being water-, food-, or air-borne, or spread by contact, shall be
reported within 24 hours to the permit-issuing official. Any camper or staff
member suspected of having a communicable disease shall be suitably
isolated.
Notes
N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. Tit. 10
§§
7-2.8
Amended
New
York State Register June 22, 2016/Volume XXXVIII, Issue 25, eff.
6/22/2016