An additional argument to show that prevention education works, is that nurses, despite their close contact with bodily fluids, are NOT at increased risk for CMV:
Regarding the pioneering CMV work in Minnesota, which now tests ALL newborns for CMV, here is their Department of Health on
CMV: (https://www.health.state.mn.
Congenital Cytomegalovirus Frequently Asked Questions
"be sure to send [your testimony] separately to any legislators who might be interested, including those who represent your district. (You can find your local legislators here.) Email your testimony with a note that says something along the lines of, “I wanted to let you know I testified about a bill that is of interest to my organization,” and summarize what you said. Be sure to mention that you’ll be happy to talk to them further about why this legislation is important (or problematic)." https://www.cthealth.org/
I am Lisa Saunders, formerly of Mystic, now living in New York. Although I support HB 6821 requiring the Department of Public Health to post information about cytomegalovirus on its website, the DPH is already doing that. But this information is not reaching women just prior to or during pregnancy to reduce their chances of contracting the #1 birth defects virus.
According to the CDC, about 1 out of 200 babies is born with congenital cytomegalovirus or CMV. Of those, 1 out of 5 will have permanent disabilities (CDC.gov/CMV). Using those stats, it can be estimated that 36 babies in Connecticut each year are born with lifelong disabilities from congenital CMV. (35,646/200/5 = 35.646 or 36 babies).
The American Academy of Pediatrics states that 8 - 20% of child care providers contract CMV every year, as compared to 1-4% of women in the general population (CDC)--probably because "Up to 70% of children ages 1 to 3 years in group care settings excrete the virus” (AAP et al.). Mothers of children in group care are also at increased risk for CMV (Pass et al, 1986).
My daughter Elizabeth was born with congenital CMV in 1989. During my pregnancy, I was a licensed, “in-home” childcare provider unaware of CMV and my increased risk. When I learned about the virus after Elizabeth’s diagnosis, my head spun. I thought I lived in a country that told its workers about their occupational hazards. Elizabeth’s brain was small and damaged. She had deafness, blindness, mental challenges, cerebral palsy and epilepsy. She died during a seizure in 2006.
In 2015, Connecticut passed HB 5525, requiring CMV testing for newborns who fail their hearing test, but our request to establish a public education program did not pass because it was estimated to cost the state $40,00 annually. Although the DPH posted a letter on its website titled, “About CMV For Obstetric Health Care Providers,” stating pregnant women should “Avoid sharing food, drinks, or utensils with children,” most patients are not receiving this information.
Five CMV prevention education studies showed that the efficacy of hygienic precautions was “[greater than] 75%” (Adler, 2015). Another study concluded that just providing printed materials alone can make a difference (Price, et al, 2014).
When I was still living in Connecticut, a grandmother contacted me about her grandson born with congenital CMV. The baby's mother, a high school student, interned at a childcare center while pregnant. She was unaware of CMV. When I visited the family in the hospital, their nurse asked me, "Knowing what you do about CMV, why haven't you launched an awareness campaign?" I told her I’ve been trying for decades.
Legislating CMV education can improve newborn outcomes and several states have policies in place. In 2022, New York passed a law requiring its DPH to provide CMV materials to child care providers and to doctors to dispense at their patient's first prenatal visit.
Thank you for your attention. I’m available to answer your questions.
About Lisa's CMV work
- Brenda K. Balch, MD, of Mystic, CT, former American Academy of Pediatrics Early Hearing Detection & Intervention Chapter Champion - Sent Testimony to CT’s HB 5525
- Shapiro, Eugene, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics, Epidemiology and Investigative Medicine, Yale University, stated, ""Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most common cause of hearing loss and neurodevelopmental disabilities in this country, and clinical trials have now shown preventive measures for pregnant women and treatment measures for CMV infected newborns are beneficial." (2014, Feb. 28). Public Hearing Testimony, H.B. No. 5147. Retrieved from Connecticut General Assembly.
- Adler, Stuart, MD, Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics and Chairman, Division of Infectious Disease. (2014, Feb. 28). Public Hearing Testimony, Raised H.B. No. 5147 . Retrieved from Connecticut General Assembly: http://www.cga.ct.
gov/2014/PHdata/Tmy/2014HB- 05147-R000228-Stuart%20Adler,% 20Emeritus%20Professor%20of% 20Pediatrics%20and%20Chairman, %20Division%20of%20Infectious% 20Disease-TMY.PDF - Demmler-Harrison,Gail, MD,Director, Congenital CMV Disease Registry and Research Program. (2015, Feb. 20). Public Hearing Testimony, Raised H.B. No. 5525. Retrieved from Connecticut General Assembly: http://www.cga.ct.
gov/2015/PHdata/Tmy/2015HB- 05525-R000220-Gail%20Demmler% 20Harrison,%20MD-TMY.PDF
News 8, "Nyberg – Author shares experience with cytomegalovirus" (Feb. 1, 2023).
News 8: National CMV Awareness Month: Lisa Saunders, musician, Debra Lynn Alt, and pediatrician Brenda K. Balch, M.D., “Mystic mother raises awareness of CMV, a risk for pregnant women and their babies”, (Sarah Cody, 2018)
Simsbury Community Television, Inc., Daughters of the American Revolution, The Abigail Phelps Chapter presents: Congenital Cytomegalovirus with guest Lisa Saunders (May 25, 2017).
Sarah Cody, News Reporter, Facebook CMV Prevention video (June 2018)
Connecticut Magazine: Mystic Mom 'Overwhelmed' by Governor Signing Law on ‘Stealth Virus’ That Can Catch Pregnant Women Unaware (OFGANG, E., 2015)
Cornell Alumni Magazine: In Memory of Elizabeth: Her daughter's death from a preventable disability spurs Lisa Avazian Saunders '82 into action (Bond, A., 2015).
Clinical Advisor magazine: “Connecticut passes cytomegalovirus screening law for newborns” (Aiken, B., 2015)
News 8 Medical/Health Report: "Mystic mom raising awareness about potentially deadly virus" (Jocelyn Maminta, 2015)
News 8: Preventing Congenital CMV During Pregnancy (Alex Ceneviva, 2015)
Fox CT, Hartford Courant: “Mother Working to Protect Pregnant Moms From Dangerous Virus“(Sarah Cody, 2014)
Mystic River Press: “Saunders seeks help with CMV ‘silent virus’ prevention bill” (Souza, M., 2014)
- NYAssembly.gov: “Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal Bill to Educate Childcare Providers, Pregnant Patients on Cytomegalovirus Dangers Signed into Law,” November 28, 2022.
- NYSenate.gov: “Senator John W. Mannion’s legislation to protect pregnant women from dangerous viral infection that’s a leading cause of birth defects is signed into law,” November 28, 2022.
- Excellent CMV advocacy website with wonderfully presented supporting info for your bills:
Massachusetts cCMV Coalition: Home
- To see several of my CMV contacts, online presentations, and media coverage (helpful to get when drumming up support), click on my CMV resume. You are welcome to share my presentations, etc. Singer/Songwriter Debra Lynn Alt of Connecticut makes her song, "Had I Known (about CMV)" available to anyone who wants to use it to raise awareness. (See June CMV Awareness Month Had I Known, Lyrics and Music by Debra Lynn Alt (2021); my Congenital CMV Public Service Announcement (PSA): Music Video--"Had I Known (about CMV)"
Since nearly half of pregnancies are unplanned, I am hoping that cytomegalovirus (CMV) prevention education, such as not sharing cups with toddlers, will be made available from health professional to their patients and added to places such as the CDC webpage "Unintended Pregnancy" under the topic, "Preconception Health Promotion".
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) - Under "What infections should I be concerned about and how can I reduce my chances of getting them during pregnancy", ACOG states, “CMV can be spread by contact with an infected child’s urine or other body fluids. Pregnant women who work with young children, such as day care workers or health care workers, should take steps to prevent infection...(https://www.acog.
org/womens-health/faqs/ reducing-risks-of-birth- defects ). - American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) states: "Despite the magnitude of the problem as well as evidence for efficacy of preventive actions, awareness among women of childbearing potential is low..." (AAP, 2022). In its book, Caring for Our Children, AAP et al. feature: “The importance of hand hygiene measures (especially handwashing and avoiding contact with urine, saliva, and nasal secretions) to lower the risk of CMV; The availability of counseling and testing for serum antibody to CMV to determine the caregiver/teacher’s immune status. (AAP et al., nrckids.org/CFOC/
Database/7.7.1.1, 2017). In addition, its book, Model Child Care Health Policies, includes a document to be signed by staff (paid or volunteer) to show “Acceptance of Occupational Risk by Staff Members,” which includes “exposure to infectious diseases (including infections that can damage a fetus during pregnancy)” (AAP, Pennsylvania Chapter, Aronson, SS, ed., 2014, p. 116). - U.S. Congress: "Recommends that more effort be taken to counsel women of childbearing age of the effect this virus can have on their children"(https://www.
congress.gov/bill/112th- congress/senate-resolution/215 ). - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) - "People who have frequent contact with young children may be at greater risk of CMV infection because young children are a common source of CMV. " (https://www.cdc.gov/cmv/
congenital-infection.html) - Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) recognizes CMV as a “hazard” for childcare workers (https://www.osha.gov/
cytomegalovirus/hazards). - Moderna: "Moms-to-be should talk to their doctors about CMV and take precautions."
- March of Dimes - "CMV often spreads during diaper changes, bathing and other close contact with babies and young children. Children can get infected with CMV at child care or school and pass it on to their families, caregivers and other children... CMV spreads easily in child care centers or preschools where children share toys that may carry CMV." (https://www.marchofdimes.org/
complications/cytomegalovirus- and-pregnancy.aspx) - National CMV Foundation - "Cytomegalovirus, or CMV, is a public health issue... we support a policy agenda aimed at ensuring access to education for women of childbearing age, accelerating research funding, screening newborns for congenital CMV, and advocating for a vaccine. Congenital CMV infection is largely undetected because the majority of affected infants are asymptomatic at birth." https://www.
nationalcmv.org/about-us/ advocacy - National Association for the Education of Young Children and its document, “NAEYC Early Childhood Program Standards and Accreditation Criteria & Guidance for Assessment,” acknowledges the need to "reduce occupational hazards such as infectious diseases (e.g., exposure of pregnant staff to CMV…)”p.90.
- ChildCare Aware of America: "if you are a childcare worker, a nursery volunteer, or have a toddler in child care, you need to know about cytomegalovirus (CMV)." (The Danger of Spreading CMV: How We Can Protect Our Children (June 2017).
OTHER RELEVENT LINKS INCLUDE
Blazek, Nicole, Senior Clinical Content Editor. (2014, June 21). Educate pregnant women to prevent congenital CMV. Retrieved Reference: 1.Pina AL. “Breaking the Silence About Congenital CMV.” Presented at: AAPN 2014. Jun 17-22; Nashville, Tenn., from The Clinical Advisor: http://www.clinicaladvisor.com/educate-pregnant-women-to-prevent-congenital-cmv/article/357115/
Demmler-Harrison, Gail, MD. (2016, December 2). Cytomegalovirus: The Virus All Pregnant Women Should Know About Now. Retrieved from Medscape.com: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/872452
Griffiths, P. (2012). The Stealth Virus. Great Britain. Retrieved from https://www.amazon.com/dp/B009L4EA6G/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1
Griffiths, P. (2016, December 15). Reviews in Medical Virology: Medical practice driven by legislators rather than by regulators. Retrieved from Wiley Online Library: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/rmv.1922/full
Griffiths, P. D. (2017, February 7). Making dollars and sense out of a screening programme. Retrieved from Wiley Online Library: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/rmv.1925/full
Infectious Diseases American Academy of Pediatrics. (2012, 2015). Children in Out-of-Home Care. In B. C. Pickering LK, Red Book (pp. 145 (2012); 144-145 (2015)). Elk Grove Village, IL: American Academy of Pediatrics. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from https://redbook.solutions.aap.org/DocumentLibrary/RB12_interior.pdf
cytomegalovirus (cCMV) among physical and occupational therapists in the United States. PLoS
ONE 12(10): e0185635. https://doi.org/10.1371/
National Congenital CMV Disease Registry . (n.d.). Retrieved from Baylor College of Medicine: https://www.bcm.edu/pedi/infect/cmv/
MORE ABOUT MY STORY
I am a parent, like many others, who didn't know how to prevent congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) until it was too late for our daughter. The moment she was born, my immediate thought was, “Her head looks so small—so deformed.” The neonatologist said, "If your daughter lives, she will never roll over, sit up, or feed herself." I was given literature stating women who work in daycare, or have a young child in daycare, are at a higher risk for catching it as preschoolers are the majority of carriers. Mothers should not kiss their toddlers around the mouth or share food with them.
Why hadn’t my OB/GYNs warned me about this before—especially since, according to the CDC, congenital CMV causes more disabilities than Down syndrome? While I was pregnant with Elizabeth I had a toddler plus ran a licensed daycare center in my home. Nowhere in the licensing literature was a CMV prevention message. In milder cases, children may lose hearing or struggle with learning. But Elizabeth's case was not a mild one. She died after a seizure in 2006.
After presenting Elizabeth’s story at the first international Congenital CMV conference at the CDC in 2008, mothers pushed their children towards me in wheelchairs and asked, “Why didn’t my OB/GYN tell me how to prevent this?” One mother even asked, "Learning what you did, why didn't you shout it from the rooftops?"
In 2010, Jim and I moved to Connecticut when Jim was transferred by Pfizer. In 2012, I received an email from a distressed grandmother about her grandson just born with congenital CMV. The baby's mother was a high school student interning in a daycare center. The young mother, just like me decades earlier, was unaware she was putting her pregnancy at increased risk by working with young children. When I visited the family in the hospital, the attending nurse asked me, "Knowing what you do about CMV, why haven’t you launched an awareness campaign?" I explained to her that CMV parents, teachers, scientists and doctors have been trying for years to raise awareness, but the virus remains little known because CMV education is not "part of standard prenatal care” (Washington Post, 2021), doctors don’t want to frighten, worry or “burden” patients (New York Times, 2016), and although OSHA lists CMV as a "Recognized Hazard", there are no federal laws governing CMV education policies for child care workers.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Lisa Saunders
Baldwinsville, New York
2) Rep. Cristen MaCarthy- Vahey, Public Health Committee, Chair, 860-240-8585, 1-800-842-8267, Cristin.McCarthyVahey@cga.ct.
860-240-0082, allison.kyff@cga.ct.gov Relevant Facebook post to comment on:https://www.facebook.com/
3) Sen. Saud Anwar, Chair: Public Health, Legislative Aide, Will Simpson, Will.Simpson@cga.ct.gov, 860-240-0347, http://www.senatedems.ct.gov/
4) Representative Nicole Klarides-Ditria (R-105), Ranking Member, Public Health Committee,Nicole.Klarides-
5) Representative Martha Marx, Vice Chair, martha.marx@cga.ct.gov,
nikki.neifeld@cga.ct.gov (she said she would advocate for it)
6) Senator Julie Kushner, Vice-Chair,
haley.zawilinski@cga.ct.gov
7) Representative John-Michael Parker, Vice-Chair,
johnmichael.parker@cga.ct.gov
These three supported previous CMV bills: 8) Representative Kevin Ryan, Kevin.Ryan@cga.ct.gov |
madison.chain@cga.ct.gov
christie.carpino@housegop.ct.
Anne.Dauphinais@housegop.ct.
Mark.DeCaprio@housegop.ct.gov
Mike.Demicco@cga.ct.gov
Keith.Denning@cga.ct.gov
Josh.Elliott@cga.ct.gov
Josh.Elliott@cga.ct.gov
henry.genga@cga.ct.gov
Jillian.Gilchrest@cga.ct.gov
Jeff.Gordon@cga.ct.gov
Eleni.KavrosDeGraw@cga.ct.gov
sarah.keitt@cga.ct.gov
Eleni.KavrosDeGraw@cga.ct.gov
sarah.keitt@cga.ct.gov
Kathy.Kennedy@housegop.ct.gov
Liz.Linehan@cga.ct.gov
Tracy.Marra@housegop.ct.gov
Kathleen.McCarty@housegop.ct.
Christine.Palm@cga.ct.gov
jason.perillo@housegop.ct.gov
Moira.Rader@cga.ct.gov
MD.Rahman@cga.ct.gov
Karen.Reddington-Hughes@
daniela.luna@cga.ct.gov
Jonathan.Steinberg@cga.ct.gov
Peter.Tercyak@cga.ct.gov
Mary.Welander@cga.ct.gov
Lezlye.Zupkus@housegop.ct.gov
https://www.facebook.com/StateRepAundreBumgardner
No comments:
Post a Comment