Title: NYMAC New York
1NYMACNew York Mid-Atlantic Consortium for
Genetic and Newborn Screening Services
- Katharine B. Harris, MT(ASCP), MBA NYS
Department of Health
2Background on Newborn Screening
- NBS began in 1963 after Dr. Robert Guthrie
developed an inexpensive way to test dried blood
spots for phenylketonuria using special bacteria. - NYS started screening for PKU in 1965
- Over 11 million infants have been screened for
PKU. - 511 NYS children have been diagnosed with PKU
before the build-up of phenylalanine had the
chance to cause severe mental retardation.
3Background on Newborn Screening
- Nationally all states include PKU, congenital
hypothyroidism, galactosemia and sickle cell
disease in their panels. - HRSA, MOD and ACMG recommend a list of conditions
that should be included in all state NBS panels - Based on NYS data and the number of US births in
2003, more than 9,000 infants would have been
diagnosed with one of the diseases in the
recommended panel - Delay in diagnosing most of these conditions
until clinical symptoms appear causes
irreversible physical and/or mental retardation
or death.
4So what happens when the lights go out or the
water rises?
5Emergency Preparedness
- To prepare procedures, agreements and collect
information that will be needed in case of a NBS
Program shut-down - To test plans for flexibility, completeness and
responsiveness
6Scope of Activity
- The state newborn screening level through
Wadsworth Center - The regional level through the (NYMAC) work group
- The national level through the National
Coordinating Centers Emergency Preparedness work
group
7Members of NYMAC Work Group 3
8What does it take to shut down a newborn
screening program?
- Natural disasters such as hurricanes, floods, ice
storms, blizzards, earthquakes - Terrorism
- Politics
- National Days of Mourning
- Accidents
- Equipment malfunctions
- Pandemics
- Other things that no one has yet thought of
9New Orleans, August 2005 Hurricanes
10Sidney, NY, June 2006 Floods
11Trenton, NJ, June 2006 - Floods
12Atlantic City, NJ, July 2006 Politics
13Adirondacks, January 1998 Ice Storms
14North Ridge, CA, October 1994 - Earthquake
15New York City, September 2001 Terrorism
16Washington, January 2007 Funerals
17Albany, NY, June 1993 Local Power Outages
18Northeast 2003 Regional Power Outages
19Ireland, February 2007 - Pandemics
20Any Place, Any Time - Equipment Failure
21Collection of Specimen Birth Hospitals
Newborn Screening Programs
X
Transport of Specimens by Couriers
Receipt of Specimen NBS Lab
Data Entry of Demographic Info
Testing for multiple analytes in several
laboratories using different methodologies
X
X
Posting results in data system
Reporting results to HOB, PCP, SCC
Contacting family for follow-up SCC, HOB, PCP
Ongoing access to Medical Care,
Drugs, Supplements, Special Foods, from
Pharmacies, Suppliers, Manufacturers
Clinical evaluation, confirmation
testing, diagnosis, treatment plan SCC, PCP
X
X
22Specimen Collection
- NBS Program must have contact information for all
birthing centers - Centers must have adequate supplies of blood
collection forms - Birthing centers must understand the relevance of
NBS and the potential impact that delay in
screening could cause - Sufficient nursery staff must be trained in blood
collection, handling and transporting
23Specimen Delivery
- Usual and alternate couriers must be identified
and contact information maintained - USPS
- FedEx
- UPS
- Private couriers
24Specimen Testing
- Lists with emergency contact information
- Lab staff
- Equipment maintenance contractors
- Reagent/consumable suppliers
- Memoranda of Understanding/ Agreements with other
NBS Labs
25Reporting Specimen Results
- Lists of emergency contact information
- NBS Follow-up staff
- Hospitals of birth
- Primary care providers
- Specialty care centers
26Database Back-up
- Most programs have automatic back-up or real-time
mirroring of the NBS database - Storage should be off-site, ideally in more than
one location with one of the locations
geographically distant from the laboratory - CDC is proposing to serve as a repository of
state NBS back-up databases
27Follow-up of Children Diagnosed through NBS
- Lists of emergency contact information
- Specialty care centers
- Food/Supplement/Drug Suppliers
- Pharmacy chains
- Specialty care centers must maintain current
lists of patient contact and medical status
information off-site!
28Collection of Specimen
Newborn Screening Programs
Communication with everyone
Transport of Specimen
Receipt of Specimen
Data Entry of Demographic Info
Testing in several laboratories using several
methodologies
Posting results in data system
Reporting results to HOB, PCP, SCC
Contacting family for follow-up
Clinical evaluation, confirmation
testing, diagnosis, treatment plan
Ongoing access to medical care,
drugs, supplements, foods
29The NBS Program must provide information to all
concerned about program and emergency status to
reduce confusion
- Government officials
- Staff
- Back-up laboratories
- Suppliers
- Courier services
- Parents
- Hospitals
- Treatment centers
- Physicians
- Public health programs
- The public
30All modes of communication must be considered and
availability determined during the emergency
- Telephone
- E-mail
- Public Service Announcements
- School Watch Broadcasts
- Websites
- Emergency Management Sites
31When to Declare an Emergency
- The nature of the emergency
- What part of the program is down?
- How long will the program be affected?
- The extent of the emergency
- Are neighboring states affected?
- How important is newborn screening in relation to
the scope of the emergency?
32Back-up Lab Considerations
- What are the number of births, NBS panel, testing
methodologies and interpretation of results in
affected state? - What is the capacity and technology of the
back-up lab? - National Newborn Screening and Genetic Resource
Center (NNSGRC) has information about all state
programs on their website
33- MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT
- between
- State of West Virginia
- Department of Health and Human Resources
- Bureau for Public Health
- Office of Laboratory Services
- and
- State of Maryland
- Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
- Laboratories Administration
34Identifying One or More Back-up Laboratories
- Many NYMAC states have formal agreements for
back-up - Other states have found that formal negotiations
between and among state legal authorities can bog
down regarding payment, ownership,
responsibilities and liability - Informal agreements seem to be easier
35Emergency Management Assistance Compact - EMAC
- All 50 states, DC, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands
are signators - EMAC provides form and structure to interstate
mutual aid. - Through EMAC, a disaster-impacted state can
request and receive assistance from other states
quickly and efficiently - Two key issues are resolved by the compact
liability and reimbursement.
36Choices
- Can one, or more, other programs meet the needs
of the affected program? - For example, New York screens as many as 1300
specimens each work day - Neighboring states are much smaller
- NYS would have to divide specimens, between two
or more other states
37Choices
- Can the back-up lab(s) test for all the analytes
on the affected states panel? - Can some analytes/conditions be delayed until the
emergency is resolved? i.e. sickle cell, cystic
fibrosis - Are some conditions so time-dependent that
delaying screening would cause irreparable harm?
i.e. PKU, MSUD, Krabbe disease
38Choices
- Can blood spot cards already screened for
selected analytes be used to screened for missed
analytes - Can the affected lab retroactively screen
specimens delayed or lost in transport? - Can infants not screened be tested once the
emergency is resolved?
39Choices
- Who owns the specimens?
- How will the back-up lab be compensated for
costs? - How will differences in cut-off levels be
handled? - How will the database of the affected lab be
brought up-to-date once the emergency is
resolved? - Etc.
40Central Laboratory Proposal
- NYMAC, APHL and CDC have been discussing the
possibility of creating a separate, full-service
newborn screening laboratory that would have all
capabilities and all methodologies. - Perhaps at CDC
- State lab staff could train there annually to
maintain proficiency and drill emergency
procedures
41Central Laboratory
- Iowa Hygienic Laboratory went to 24/7 operation
after Katrina to do Louisianas NBS - They are developing plans for permanent capacity
to act as back-up during emergencies
42Emergency Preparedness Drills
- Regardless of the efforts made to develop back-up
plans, it is vital that the plans be tested - The effectiveness of drills must be evaluated
- CDC and APHL are involved with states in training
for public health emergencies - Region 5 Heartlands has proposed a project to
develop drill scenarios. - NBS must work with state emergency programs in
their system drills