LAB MATTERS
spring 2018 | contents
COLUMNS Food Safety
2 24 A New Beginning: PulseNet Middle
East Reinvigorated
President’s/Executive Director’s
Message
Environmental Health
SECTIONS
Public Health Preparedness and
Response
4 Goodbye to Mice? APHL and CDC Host
LRN Botulinum Neurotoxin Detection
Training
5 Preparing for the Super Bowl:
Minnesota Gets Ahead of the Game
6 Three Years, Seven Stories: Reflecting
on Biosafety and Biosecurity Progress
25 Changing the Pediatric Lead Reference
Level: What It Means for the Public
Health Laboratory
26 Is There Cyanide in My Drinking
Water?
Policy
28 From Atlanta to Washington,
APHL Supports Public Health Policy
Infectious Diseases
Partner Profile
14 15 Minutes With Dr. Sonja Rasmussen 29 MicrobeNet: Identifying Hard-to-
Identify Pathogens From the Bench 30 Syphilis Rising: APHL’s Efforts to
Address Another Historic Foe 8 FEATURE
Institutional Research When the Water Comes,
Be Prepared
16 Louisville Expands Arbovirus
Surveillance, Streamlines
Mosquito Testing
31 Data Dive: Preparing for the
Unexpected
18 Mycobacterium tuberculosis Next
Generation Sequencing: Hitting the
Easy Button
Membership
Newborn Screening 32 100 Faces of Excellence in Missouri
19 NBS Programs Get “Building Blocks” to
Implement Electronic Data Exchange 34 Monitoring Environmental Conditions
in the Buckeye State
Global Health Fellows
20 Public Health System Reform in
Ukraine: Making Impactful Changes
in the Public Health Laboratory
36 APHL Fellowship Programs Update
21 After Civil War and Ebola, Sierra Leone
Grapples with Mother Nature
According to a study by the
National Center for Atmospheric
Research, the volume of rainfall
from storms will rise by as much
as 80% in North America by the
end of the century. For state and
local governmental laboratories,
these data are a wake-up call.
Not only do storms and floods
threaten public health laboratory
facilities, but receding floodwaters
pose serious public health risks. So
what’s the best weapon in a public
health lab’s arsenal? Preparation for
inundation…from any source.
22 Linking Lab Systems and Workforce
Development via GHSA
23 Zambia Commissions New Molecular
Biology Lab for EID and Viral Load
Testing
APHL LAB MATTERS STAFF APHL BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Gynene Sullivan, MA, Editor Ewa King, PhD, president
Karen Klinedinst, Art Director Joanne Bartkus, PhD, D(ABMM), president-elect
Jody DeVoll, MAT, Advisor
To submit an article for consideration, contact
Gynene Sullivan, editor, at [email protected].
The Association of Public Health Laboratories (APHL) works to
strengthen laboratory systems serving the public’s health in the US
and globally. APHL’s member laboratories protect the public’s health
by monitoring and detecting infectious and foodborne diseases,
environmental contaminants, terrorist agents, genetic disorders in
newborns and other diverse health threats.
8515 Georgia Avenue, Suite 700
Silver Spring, MD 20910
Grace E. Kubin, PhD, member-at-large
Denise Marie Toney, PhD, HCLD(ABB), member-at-large
Scott J. Zimmerman, DrPH, MPH, HCLD(ABB),
member-at-large
Maria Lucia Ishida, PhD, public health associate
institutional member representative
Tamara Theisen, MT(ASCP), local institutional member
representative
Mark Wade, local institutional member representative
Phone: 240.485.2745
Fax: 240.485.2700
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: www.aphl.org
PublicHealthLabs
Bill Whitmar, MS, secretary-treasurer
A. Christian Whelen, PhD, D(ABMM), past president
Scott J. Becker, MS, ex officio, executive director, APHL
@APHL
APHL.org
Spring 2018 LAB MATTERS
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