Descripción general
OHS offers essential & required vaccines, health screenings and medical surveillance through our drop-in clinics and by appointment.
Flu vaccines
COVID-19 vaccines
Immunization and other records
COVID-19
If you received your COVID vaccination(s) in California, obtain a copy of the record here.
You also can visit an Occupational Health drop-in location during regular business hours.
Other records
To obtain a copy of your immunization record, please complete and sign this form.
If you have an active UCSF mailbox, we can email your immunization record to you. Otherwise, please include a fax number or mailing address, along with a legible phone number in case we need to contact you.
If you would like to obtain a record of your Workers' Comp visits, please visit UCSF Medical Records.
Screening and testing
COVID-19 testing
- Testing will continue to be offered in UCSF Health clinics and at many locations in the community.
- Occupational Health will maintain supplies of antigen tests available to faculty, staff and learners.
- If you need testing guidance for COVID symptoms, exposure, or return to work following COVID infection, visit the Digital Screener or call the COVID Hotline (415-514-7328) for more information.
- If you have any issues obtaining rapid antigen tests for return to work or school, check with Occupational Health Services.
- BCH Oakland employees should email Employee Health or call x3620.
Tuberculosis screening
UCSF Occupational Health Services has implemented the TB Flex Program for employees working in UCSF Health. This program, which took effect Jan. 1, 2023, modifies the TB/Tuberculosis screening compliance requirements for FY 2022-2023 and is being considered for implementation on an ongoing basis.
The annual TB symptom screening questionnaire is on the OHS Portal (VPN/MyAccess required from a UCSF computer). Employees without MyAccess who need assistance filing their annual questionnaire may come to OHS locations during drop-in hours for completion.
The timing for completion will remain the same – once annually during the month that it was completed in the prior calendar year.
What’s new
- All staff and learners working in Health will be required to complete an annual TB symptom screening questionnaire on the OHS Portal.
- Only staff identified by OHS as working in high-risk areas or roles and as having a negative TB skin test (PPD) the previous year will be required to complete both the annual TB symptom screening questionnaire AND an annual TB skin test (PPD).
- PPDs no longer will be mandatory for employees working in areas not deemed as high risk.
- The process and requirements for new hires remains unchanged.
TB Surveillance Program
UCSF requires baseline and annual tuberculosis skin testing for all occupational groups that meet the definitions of Risk Category I and II defined in the UCSF Communicable Disease Surveillance and Vaccination Policy and have contact with patients or human subjects through their work or research in the UCSF Medical Center and Ambulatory Care Clinic practices. Newly hired Medical Center employees must complete the TB screening process prior to their start of employment date. All eligible personnel must participate annually.
Personnel who have tested positive in the past are required to have one baseline chest X-ray and thereafter complete an annual symptom review by dropping by one of our drop-in clinic locations during business hours. Chest X-rays will not be performed annually, but only if indicated based on the clinical presentation. At any time, if any employee has symptoms of TB (persistent cough, low grade fevers, unexplained weight loss, night sweats) further evaluation must be done. Please consult Occupational Health Services.
Occupational Health Services also provides pre-placement TB skin testing for new UCSF employees at Zuckerberg San Francisco General.
Q-fever surveillance
Q-fever surveillance involves baseline and annual screening of UCSF employees working with sheep as well as post-exposure assessment as necessary.
The process involves assessing risks for the population, conducting sign and symptom review, drawing titers on employees with past negative or equivocal titers, assessing titer results, recommending medical follow-up if necessary, tracking the data over time to provide historical baseline on serology, and reporting any trends in conversions.