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For Immediate
Release
6/10/08
 
Senator Orie and Pro Football Hall of Fame
Member
Jim Kelly Call for PA to Adopt Improved Newborn Screenings Bill
Former Buffalo Bills quarterback Jim Kelly joined Sen. Jane Orie
(R-Allegheny) at a press conference today at the State Capitol to urge members
of the legislature to approve and fund the Newborn Child Testing Act (House Bill
883).
The bill, which is similar to legislation that Sen. Orie introduced in the
Senate, was approved unanimously by the House and the Senate Public Health and
Welfare Committee, and is awaiting action by the Senate Appropriations
Committee.
Orie said the legislation would require all Pennsylvania hospitals to screen
newborns for 28 new genetic conditions that are serious but treatable if caught
early.
The legislation would provide a $2 million appropriation to establish a
program, track results and support four treatment facilities across Pennsylvania
that would provide the treatment to newborns who suffer from the genetic
conditions.
"I'd like to especially thank Jim Kelly for joining us and offering his
support for legislation to expand newborn screening," Orie said. "He has been a
steadfast supporter of this effort and helped to bring this issue to the
national forefront."
Kelly founded Hunter's Hope Foundation, in honor of his son, to increase
awareness about newborn diseases and to raise funding for research on treatments
and cures.
Thanks in part to that foundation, newborn screening legislation was signed
into law by President Bush on April 24, 2007. The bill created national
standards by expanding screenings of newborn babies and by authorizing a grant
program to expand the funding to state and local health agencies.
Pennsylvania began its first newborn screening program in 1965, and today
requires screening for eight metabolic disorders and hearing impairments. While
most hospitals also offer screening for the other 20 "core" genetic conditions
recommended by American College of Medical Genetics and endorsed by the March of
Dimes and American Academy of Pediatrics, they are not required to do so by
law. That means screening for any non-required conditions could be potentially
eliminated or reduced.
"The legislation we are pushing for would require screening for hearing
impairments and 29 genetic and metabolic conditions, which, if left untreated,
could results either in long term disability or death," Orie said. "And
according to the Department of Health, the average lifetime medical costs for a
child can exceed more than $1 million dollars."
Treatment, on the other hand, can be as simple as a change in diet. For some
conditions, the parents must feed the newborn every few hours, not allowing the
child to sleep through a regular meal period. Other conditions may require less
protein, or more fat, to provide sufficient calories for growth.
"Each and every baby born in our state deserves the opportunity for a healthy
start. Newborn screening is a vital public health activity that provides early
identification and treatment for infants affected by certain metabolic,
hormonal, genetic and or functional disorders," Orie said. "The lack of a
requirement that Pennsylvania newborns be screened for all 29 treatable
disorders means that babies in our state are at risk of disability or even
death. It's time for Pennsylvania to act on behalf of our smallest and
youngest citizens and their families by supporting this bill."
Contact:
Carol Maravic
(717) 787-6725
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