#Stop CMV rocks painted by Kaia's mom, Tabitha Rodenhaus of Kenmore (near Buffalo).
1) "The New York State Department of Health announced that effective October 2, 2023, all babies will be screened for Congenital Cytomegalovirus (cCMV), making New York the second state in the nation, after Minnesota, to screen all babies for the virus" (NY Dept. of Health, Sept. 29, 2023). The NY Newborn Screening Program is provisionally adding congenital CMV (cCMV) to its "screening panel for a period of one year" using dried blood spot (DBS) (NY Dept. Health, Wadsworth Center, Sept 1, 2023). More information below my signature.
2) On Sept. 20, 2023, the New York Assembly and Senate introduced bill A07997/S07659: "Requires cytomegalovirus screening for every newborn by administration of a urine polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test." "State Sen. John Mannion, who sponsors [this] bill that would make the screening permanent, said early diagnosis and treatment are key in mitigating long-term health problems for babies, emphasizing the need for screening. According to Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, who also sponsors the bill, further action will depend on the results of the pilot. (Crain's New York Business, Sept. 28, 2023). (New York already has laws regarding targeted CMV testing and the provision of prevention education materials to pregnant women and child care providers.)
Lisa Saunders
How CMV affected me: Our daughter Elizabeth was born with brain damage in 1989 because I contracted CMV just prior to or during my pregnancy. I might have prevented her disabilities had I known to lessen my "risk of getting CMV by reducing contact with saliva and urine from babies and young children...not sharing food, utensils, or cups with a child" (CDC.gov/CMV). In 2022, “Elizabeth’s Law,” named in memory of our daughter, was passed in New York requiring the provision of CMV educational materials to child care providers and pregnant women.
(https://www.wadsworth.org/news/congenital-cytomegalovirus-ccmv-screening).
The following mother expresses why screening all newborns for CMV is important:
Kristin Schuster of Canandaigua, mom to Autumn (born 2015), said, "Unfortunately, my daughter wasn't diagnosed with congenital CMV until 18 months old--well after the opportunity had passed to receive treatment most effective when given between ages zero to six months. She was not diagnosed with congenital CMV at birth despite failing her newborn hearing screen multiple times, having 'low for gestational age' birth weight, and microcephaly. Autumn received her first pair of hearing aids for bilateral severe hearing loss at 4 months old, glasses for vision impairment at 5 months, an MRI showing brain calcifications, very significant global delays, and received a g-tube for feeding at 15 months of age. Up until then, all of the doctors and specialists we were seeing claimed that her diagnoses were 'unrelated.' It wasn't until I read an article about CMV posted in a Facebook group for Rochester parents of children with hearing loss that I had that 'aha' moment that congenital CMV must be the root cause of all of my daughter's difficulties. When I requested to have her tested for CMV, I was initially given pushback, but when I demanded her newborn blood spot be tested, her neurologist arranged to have it tested from where it was banked in Albany. When the test came back, we finally had our confirmed diagnosis of congenital CMV--too late for her to receive treatment in the optimal first months of life" (https://congenitalcmv.blogspot.com/2023/01/new-york- test-every-newborn-for-cmv. html).
Kristin's daughter Autumn was her first child, so Kristin assumes she caught CMV from the young children she worked with. Kristin told me, "I was teaching in a pre-kindergarten inclusion classroom while pregnant with Autumn and was unaware of the dangers of CMV exposure." (You can watch Kristin with her daughter Autumn at our June CMV Awareness Month event in the music video, Had I Known, Lyrics and Music by Debra Lynn Alt , 2021.)
It's interesting that recent newborn screening for CMV has seen a decrease in congenital infections. "The hygienic precautions we all have engaged in during the pandemic -- masking, hand-washing and infection prevention behaviors -- were almost certainly responsible for the reduction in CMV transmission, which in turn protected mothers and newborns from the potentially devastating effects of the CMV virus," Schleiss said in a school news release. Researchers also attributed the reduction to stay-at-home initiatives and the closing of group child care centers during those months."(Pandemic Silver Lining: Drop in Infections That Cause Birth Defects, USNews.com, Sept. 12, 2022).
Minnesota has a good list of protocols to follow when a child tests positive for cCMV: https://www.health.state.mn.