Friday, May 24, 2024

Memoir by mom of child with severely damaged brain: "Had I Known about CMV: From Shock to Law" by Lisa Saunders





In celebration of June National Cytomegalovirus Awareness Month, the e-book version of  "Had I Known about CMV: From Shock to Law," is free today through Thursday, June 6, 2024. Both the paperback and e-book version have a "Read sample" feature. 


I was the mother of Elizabeth, born with a severely damaged brain because I contracted the common virus, cytomegalovirus (CMV),  just prior to or during pregnancy. Because women of childbearing age are still largely unaware of how to prevent CMV, the leading viral cause of birth defects, I wrote "Had I Known about CMV: From Shock to Law," which features ground-breaking CMV legislation and the current  Stop CMV Act (S.3864/H.R.7542),  introduced by Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) and Rep. Lawler, Michael (R-NY-17) on March 5, 2024.

On June 4th, I was sent an email from U.S Senator Charles E. Schumer who said: "This bill seeks to enhance newborn screening efforts for CMV. S.3864 is currently under review by the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, and I will closely monitor this bill's progress." 

The major forces behind the Stop CMV Act 2024 were the National CMV Foundation and a Connecticut CMV grandma, Ann Nyberg, "the longest-serving female news anchor/reporter in Connecticut television history” (WTNH). 

Please see the following press releases for more information about Had I Known about CMV: From Shock to Law and current legislation. 


If you have any questions, please let me know!

Sincerely, 

Lisa Saunders, Author
LisaSaunders42@gmail.com
Advisory Board, Parent Advocate, PROACTIVE NYS 
Baldwinsville, New York

Host, PAC-B TV


IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Mom of Child with Severely Damaged Brain Releases Memoir

 "Had I Known about CMV: From Shock to Law" by Lisa Saunders


Baldwinsville, New York -- Although Lisa Saunders was at high risk for contracting cytomegalovirus (CMV), she wasn't educated about it and neither are most women – even though one-third of pregnant women are at high risk: “that is, they have daily household or occupational contact with children less than 3 years old” (Adler, 2011). In her new memoir,  "Had I Known about CMV: From Shock to Law," Saunders shares her emotions while raising Elizabeth 1989-2006), born with a severely damaged brain from congenital CMV, and how she's trying to make women of childbearing age aware of recommendations from the CDC -- that they can reduce their chances of getting CMV by "reducing contact with saliva (spit) and urine from babies and young children...Do not share food, utensils, cups, or pacifiers with a child. Wash your hands with soap and water after changing diapers or helping a child to use the toilet" (CDC). 

Excerpt of "Had I Known about CMV from Introduction: 

Recently, a friend told me, “I warned my pregnant daughter about CMV, but she said, ‘Mom, if CMV was a problem, my doctor would have told me’.”

No, they probably won't,” I said, frustrated that so little has changed since my daughter Elizabeth’s birth 35 years ago. The moment she was born, I felt a stab of fear. My immediate thought was, “Her head looks so small – so deformed."

This memoir is my heart laid bare. My desire is that it will help people experiencing their own hardships to find hope in the midst of adversity and that those who seek to raise awareness will find new ideas. Elizabeth will never have descendants, but perhaps, through her story, more children will be born healthy because their mothers knew how to stop CMV. 


Saunders said she wrote the memoir in two parts: 

Part I is about my life with Elizabeth (1989- 2006), including the family, friends, and strangers who comforted or inspired me. I eventually learned how to deal with my shock over Elizabeth’s profound brain damage by journaling, searching the Bible for relevant Scriptures, and by swallowing the occasional Valium. One Scripture that helped me move from deep depression to eventual joy was, "Perfect love casts out fear" (1 John 4:18). I learned to dwell on just loving Elizabeth and not her prognosis.

Part II is about the challenges of raising CMV awareness and the CMV warriors I’ve met along the way between 2006-2024. In 2015, while living in Connecticut, I collaborated with parents and doctors to help the state become the second to pass a targeted CMV testing law. Later, returning to our home state of New York, I helped get “Elizabeth’s Law,” named in memory of our daughter, passed in 2022. It requires the provision of CMV educational materials to pregnant women and child care providers. And now, as a result of an army of CMV advocates, the STOP CMV Act 2024 was introduced at the federal level.

Saunders also includes a CMV Timeline in her Appendix, which features how the State of New York has been managing the problem of CMV. (New York-related excerpts are seen below the press release.)

Saunders is currently walking 360 miles across the State of New York on the Erie Canalway Trail between Albany and Buffalo with her husband, Jim, leaving behind Stop CMV rocks to help raise awareness. She was featured in USA Today for her CMV work and was the recipient of the National CMV Foundation Spirit of Advocacy Award in 2023. To learn more about her work, visit: congenitalcmv.blogspot.com

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Excerpts of New York-related CMV Timeline from 

2018

After reading the New York Times article, “CMV Is a Greater Threat to Infants Than Zika, but Far Less Often Discussed,” New York Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal thought something needed to be done. She was able to get a targeted CMV testing law passed in 2018. A587C/S2816 “Requires urine polymerase chain reaction testing for cytomegalovirus of newborns with hearing impairments”.


2019

"Childcare workers, early interventionists, early childhood providers (including daycare providers, pre-school teachers) and Healthcare workers (including nurses, therapists)” are at increased risk for CMV stated Nellie Brown, MS, CIH, Director of Workplace Health & Safety Programs, Lead Programs Manager, Certified Industrial Hygienist, ILR Outreach Statewide and Buffalo Co-Lab, ILR School, Cornell University, in her presentation, “Occupational Exposure to Cytomegalovirus (CMV): Preventing Exposure in Child Care and Educational Settings, Including OSHA Advisories, 2019). Nellie Brown said, “Universal precautions are work practices and they work very well for bloodborne pathogens such as HIV and HBV.”


2021

On April 20, 2021, New York legislators filed the CMV education bill, S6287C/A7560, named “Elizabeth’s Law,” in memory of my daughter. Trail Works Inc. Recognizes CMV  Awareness on National Trails Day” on June 5.  Children featured in the music video of the event, “Had I Known [about CMV], Lyrics and Music by Debra Lynn Alt,” included mine (through a photograph), Jessica Keukelaar’s and Kristin Schuster’s (we three were caregivers/teachers during our pregnancies). Over 70 families unable to attend asked that their child’s name be placed on a silver rock. 

In 2021, “Elizabeth’s Law” passed in the Senate, but the Assembly didn’t vote it by the end of the legislative session. As I awaited the 2022 legislative session to resume, Jim and I continued to leave silver “Stop CMV” rocks across New York State to raise awareness of the bill: “Erie Canal Trail: Stop Cytomegalovirus (CMV) Birth Defects. Pass "Elizabeth's Law" (Nov. 2021). Tabitha Rodenhaus of Kenmore paints the Stop CMV rocks in front of her daughter Kaia (born with congenital CMV in 2016) because she enjoys watching her mom work.

CMV is "'a virus that has a PR problem...It's a virus we have recognized for over 60 years as the cause of birth defects and brain damage in infants...'" stated Dr. Sallie Permar, Chair, Department of Pediatrics, Weill Cornell Medicine, and pediatrician-in-chief, New York-Presbyterian Komansky Children's Hospital (“Dr. Sallie Permar's Work Protecting Mothers, Infants from HIV, CMV Lands Her Among 'Giants'”, 2021) 


2022

Nov 28, 2022: New York Governor signed “Elizabeth’s Law,” named in memory of my daughter. S6287C/A7560, which “Requires the provision of informational materials to child care providers and certain physicians and midwives regarding the impacts and dangers of congenital cytomegalovirus infection.”


2023

New York: on September 20, 2023, a universal CMV testing bill was filed, A07997/S07659, which "requires cytomegalovirus screening for every newborn..."

"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". 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) (“Congenital Cytomegalovirus (cCMV) Screening | New York State Department of Health). The goal of testing every newborn for cCMV for one year is to help answer questions about whether or not universal cCMV screening can be successful nationwide. They need to see if cCMV can be detected by dried blood spot newborn screening and "Is catching and diagnosing cCMV at birth helpful?" It is believed that "Screening in a diverse population like New York will help determine true incidence" (Bradley). (To learn more about the pilot study, visit: www.proactivenys.org, or contact Andrew Handel, MD, Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University at: andrew.handel@stonybrookmedicine.edu, or Sharon Nachman MD, Distinguished Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Associate Dean for Research, Renaissance School of Medicine, SUNY Stony Brook).

USA TODAY's article, "This virus is a leading cause birth defects. Why isn't it screened more?" (Oct. 2, 2023) explains New York’s one-year study: “With its pilot program, New York is the largest state to enact CMV screening. It's available to about 220,000 babies born annually in the state. State Rep. Linda Rosenthal, a Manhattan Democrat who sponsored Elizabeth's Law [John W. Mannion, Senate sponsor], now has a bill before the Legislature following New York’s pilot, that would make universal screening permanent. It expands on a 2018 law Rosenthal sponsored that mandates hospitals test babies for CMV if they fail a hearing screening. The plan is to compare babies who failed a hearing screening with those who tested positive for CMV to babies who did not fail hearing tests, said Dr. Michele Caggana, director of the New York State Department of Health Newborn Screening Program..." (Cuevas).

2024

STOP CMV Act 2024 was introduced on March 5th at the federal levelRepublican sponsor, Congressman Mike Lawler of the 17th District, New York, attended my daughter Elizabeth’s funeral services 18 years earlier in 2006 (he was a classmate of my older daughter when in high school). Congressman Lawler and I corresponded in 2022 about “Elizabeth’s Law” (he was Assemblyman Lawler then), and in June 2023, his staff met with National CMV Foundation board member, Dr. Sallie Permar, the chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medicine. Congressman Lawler told me, “They asked me to introduce this bill in the House." And he did! I sent Congressman Lawler one of the silver Stop CMV rocks as a thank you. If you live in the United States, please ask your congressman and U.S. senators to cosponsor the STOP CMV Act 2024 (learn how, with sample letter templates, at: “CMV Legislation | National CMV Foundation”).