LAB MATTERS
COLUMNS
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SUMMER 2019 | CONTENTS
Institutional Research
President’s Message
Executive Director’s Message
22 A New PHL Workforce:
The Rise of the Next Generation
Public Policy
SECTIONS
THE AR LAB
NETWORK
Summer 2019 Issue 3
23 APHL Articulates Value of Public
Health Labs During Annual Policy
Symposium, Capitol Hill Visit
Infectious Diseases
10 Antimicrobial Resistance Fellows
Contribute to CRE Identification in
Maryland and Minnesota
11 A Collaborative Effort to Identify
Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis—The
rpoB Alert
Informatics
12 AR Lab Network Benefits from APHL’s
ETOR Solution
Environmental Health
13 Small Town, Big Response:
A Thanksgiving Emergency Makes a
Deep Impact on Lab, Community
14 Efforts Toward a Lead-Free Future
From the Bench
16 Measuring Human Exposures to
Triclosan and Parabens
17 With the Help of Automation, San
Diego Rejoins PulseNet
18 South Carolina Automates WGS for
Foodborne Outbreak Surveillance
Global Health
20 APHL Mozambique Responds to
Cyclone Idai
Public Health Preparedness and
Response
24 APHL BSL-3 Seminar Promotes
Learning Through Collaboration
25 COOP Exercises Aim to Keep the
Wheels Turning During a Disaster
26 Biosafety and Beyond: Laboratory
Training and Mentorship in the USAPI
Quality Systems
28 Iowa visits Arizona and New Mexico
in APHL’s New Quality Manager
Exchange Program
Membership
30 APHL 2019: Where Science and Public
Health Meet
32 Promoting Community Wellness,
Water Quality in Western New York
34 Protecting Environmental Health and
Resources in Oklahoma
Fellows
36 Presenting, Graduating,
Incoming: APHL Fellows Develop
Leadership Skills
Digital Extra
Industry Matters
21 FDA Clears Two Tests for Extragenital
CT and NG
Inside:
00 Efforts Toward a Lead-Free Future
00 With the Help of Automation,
San Diego Rejoins PulseNet
00 Protecting Environmental Resources
in the Sooner State
ASSOCIATION OF PUBLIC HEALTH LABORATORIES
4 FEATURE
The AR Lab Network:
A Game-changer in the Fight
Against Antibiotic Resistance
Given the global rise of drug-
resistant pathogens over the past
few decades, some physicians
and scientists warn of a possible
antibiotic apocalypse—a scary, post-
antibiotic era. But a $160 million CDC
effort now aims to keep antibiotic
resistance rare. The keystone of this
effort? The Antibiotic Resistance
Laboratory Network.
37 APHL 2019 Poster Abstracts
APHL LAB MATTERS STAFF APHL BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Gynene Sullivan, MA, CAPM, editor Grace E. Kubin, PhD, president
Karen Klinedinst, art director Bill Whitmar, MS, president-elect
Jody DeVoll, MAT, advisor
A Game-changer in the Fight
Against Antibiotic Resistance
Daphne Ware, PhD, secretary-treasurer
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.
Richard S. Steece, PhD, D(ABMM), member-at-large
Denise Marie Toney, PhD, HCLD(ABB), member-at-large
Anthony “Tony” Tran, DrPH, MPH, D(ABMM), member-
at-large
Maria Lucia Ishida, PhD, associate institutional member
representative
Megan Crumpler, PhD, local institutional member
representative
8515 Georgia Avenue, Suite 700
Silver Spring, MD 20910
Phone: 240.485.2745
Fax: 240.485.2700
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: www.aphl.org
Mark Wade, local institutional member representative
Joanne Bartkus, PhD, D(ABMM), immediate past
president
Scott J. Becker, MS, ex officio, executive director, APHL
PublicHealthLabs
@APHL
APHL.org
Summer 2019 LAB MATTERS
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