The provisions of 105 CMR 670.025 apply only with respect to patients who are or become employees or community residents as defined in 105 CMR 670.005, on or after the effective date of M.G.L. c. 111F.
Nothing in M.G.L. c. 111F or in 105 CMR 670.000 shall prevent an employer or manufacturer from voluntarily providing MSDS's to a physician or any other person.
An employer is not required to include, on an MSDS provided to a designated representative, the identity of the substance if the Commissioner or his designee has determined pursuant to 105 CMR 670.020 that the identity of the substance is a trade secret of the preparer of the MSDS. A physician who is a designated representative and who seeks an MSDS without such trade secret identity is not required to comply with the procedures specified in 105 CMR 670.025.
105 CMR 670.025(B), applies to the situation in which the patient for whose treatment or care MSDS information is sought is a former employee who may have been exposed to toxic or hazardous substances in the workplace. 105 CMR 670.025(C), applies to the situation in which the patient is a resident of the municipality in which a workplace is or was located which may have been the source of the patient's exposure. 105 CMR 670.025(D) and (E), contain additional provisions which apply to both situations.
"I agree to keep the MSDS's which you have provided under M.G.L. c. 111F confidential in the same manner and to the same extent that I normally preserve the confidentiality of other medical information about my patient.
"In addition, if the name of a substance for which you provided an MSDS has been determined by the Commissioner of Public Health to be a trade secret, and if you have so informed me and requested me to do so in writing, I will not place the name of the substance in the patient's regular medical record. If, in order to properly treat my patient, I believe that it is necessary that I maintain a record of such a trade secret name, I shall do so in a separate file. I may disclose such trade secret name to other medical personnel only if I believe that it is necessary that they know such trade secret name in order to provide proper treatment to my patient.
"With regard to MSDS information which you provide and which you have not informed me has been determined to be a trade secret by the Commissioner of Public Health I may use such information in the same manner in which I generally use other medical information about my patient.
"I acknowledge that this is a legally binding agreement under the Massachusetts "Right to Know" law, M.G.L. c. 111F."
105 CMR, § 670.025