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Lab Culture
Lab Culture is a podcast by the Association of Public Health Laboratories (APHL) about public health, laboratory science, and everything in between. Join us for discussions about infectious diseases, food safety, emergency preparedness, newborn screening, environmental health, global health, and more.
- 42 - Dr. Bell and Dr. Yarosz love their CDC LLS fellowship experience. What is the LLS fellowship?
What is the CDC Laboratory Leadership Service (LLS)? In this episode, we learn more about it from two current LLS fellows. Drs. Courtnee Bell and Emily Yarosz discuss how they learned about the fellowship, their experiences and where they see themselves when their fellowships end.
CDC Laboratory Leadership Service (LLS)
Virginia Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services (DCLS)
Minnesota Public Health Laboratory
Public Health Laboratory Fellowship Program: an APHL-CDC Initiative
Thu, 28 Sep 2023 - 47min - 41 - Past, Present and Future of Biosafety
Today’s show is a conversation between four past winners of APHL’s Leadership in Biosafety and Biosecurity Award. Jill Power, Christina Egan, Carrie Anglewicz and Andrew Cannons share their thoughts on the past, present and future of biosafety in public health laboratories.
Andrew C. Cannons, PhD Laboratory Director Bureau of Public Health Laboratories –Tampa Florida Department of Health
Jill J. Power, MS Deputy Director New Hampshire Public Health Laboratories New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services
Carrie Anglewicz, MS Biosafety Officer, Laboratory Outreach Bureau of Laboratories Michigan Department of Health and Human Services
Christina Egan, PhD Deputy Director, Division of Infectious Diseases Chief, Biodefense and Mycology Laboratories Wadsworth Center New York State Department of Health
Links:
Leadership in Biosafety and Biosecurity Award
Strengthening Lab Biosafety & Biosecurity
APHL Blog posts about biosafety
Mon, 31 Oct 2022 - 31min - 40 - APHL CEO Scott Becker wants to bring public health laboratory work into the foreground
It’s September which means it is Public Health Laboratory Appreciation Month! We are kicking off a month of celebrating by chatting with Scott Becker, APHL CEO, about the exciting work being done by public health laboratory staff as well as the challenges many face. Scott also shares what he’s most looking forward to in the year to come.
Don’t forget to follow #ThanksPHLabs and APHL on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Tiktok this Public Health Laboratory Appreciation Month!
Links:
2022 Public Health Laboratory Appreciation Month Toolkit
E.coli Outbreak with Unknown Food Source (August 2022)
What is the APHL-CDC Fellowship Program and why should you consider applying?
APHL Newborn Screening Symposium
Thu, 01 Sep 2022 - 32min - 39 - What's next for the Laboratory Response Network (LRN) response to monkeypox?
As the 2022 monkeypox outbreak began to spread around the globe, the Laboratory Response Network (LRN) was prepared with the appropriate test and experienced staff trained to perform it. These frontline responders were the first to test suspected monkeypox samples in the US and continue to be vital to this public health emergency response. As we move into the next phase of this response with commercial laboratories coming online to test patients, what is the role of the LRN? What role do public health laboratories, the largest segment of LRN labs, play? In this episode, two key APHL leaders answer these questions and more: Dr. Ewa King, chief program officer, and Chris Mangal, director of public health preparedness and response.
Links:
The LRN’s job is to prepare, detect and respond. But what exactly does that mean?
U.S. Monkeypox Outbreak 2022: Situation Summary (CDC)
Thu, 07 Jul 2022 - 28min - 38 - Day 3: 2022 APHL Annual Conference
Day three of the 2022 APHL Annual Conference was a great one! We started off with the annual awards ceremony which always sets the tone for an exciting day. This mini episode includes an interview with one of the APHL-CDC Bioinformatics Fellows about his first experience at the APHL Annual Conference.
Thu, 19 May 2022 - 06min - 37 - Day 2: 2022 APHL Annual ConferenceWed, 18 May 2022 - 09min
- 36 - Day 1: 2022 APHL Annual ConferenceTue, 17 May 2022 - 08min
- 35 - Scientists in Oregon and Michigan Honor World TB Day
Every year we commemorate World TB Day on March 24, the anniversary of the day Dr. Robert Koch first announced that he discovered Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacillus that causes TB. This World TB Day, we are sharing an insightful conversation between two TB laboratory leaders: Angie Schooley, B.S. MT(ASCP), Mycobacteriology/Mycology Unit Manager, Michigan Department of Health & Human Services and Caitlin Miranda, M(ASCP), Microbiologist III, Oregon State Public Health Laboratory.
Links:
Oregon State Public Health Laboratory Oregon Public Health Division Tuberculosis Program Michigan Department of Health & Human Services Tuberculosis Control Program Bovine TB testing of wild deer wraps up after disease found at Michigan cervid farms (February 8, 2022) What is Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis (XDR TB)? (CDC Fact Sheet) 12th National Conference on Laboratory Aspects of Tuberculosis World TB Day APHL Tuberculosis webpage APHL Blog – Tuberculosis blog posts Lab Culture Ep. 8: Leaders for a TB free worldWed, 23 Mar 2022 - 33min - 34 - Discussing food safety with colleagues, but please not over lunch
Like most things in public health science, food safety is complicated. The nuance can be difficult for non-scientists to understand and difficult for scientists to communicate. On this episode of Lab Culture, Shari Shea, APHL’s director of food safety, discusses some of what makes food safety fascinating and complex along with guests Ben Chapman, Associate Professor and Extension Food Safety Specialist at North Carolina State University, and Don Schaffner, Distinguished Professor and Extension Specialist in Food Science and Professor at Rutgers University.
Links:
Food Safety Talk 242: Invisible Poop Particles
Risky or Not episode 217: Homemade Treats From Neighbors
Risky or Not episode 87: 27 Lbs of Unrefrigerated Feta Cheese
Risky or Not episode 214: Having a Romantic Flour Fight
“Modeling the growth of Listeria monocytogenes on cut cantaloupe, honeydew and watermelon”
Hello Fresh: Food Safety/Recall Notices
“Labs with No One to Run Them: Why Public Health Workers Are Fleeing the Field”
“APHL: Historic Investments Will Strengthen Public Health Laboratory Workforce”
Lab Culture Ep. 22: Life as a public health lab scientist testing for COVID-19
“DO NOT RINSE YOUR TURKEY! And other Thanksgiving food rules for every day”
Fri, 05 Nov 2021 - 1h 21min - 33 - How two New Jersey lab scientists launched an unprecedented prenatal lead and mercury screening program
Eric Bind and Andrew Steffens, scientists at the New Jersey Public Health and Environmental Laboratories, knew their lab was capable of screening expectant mothers and newborn babies for lead and mercury. But creating a program that also included important clinical interventions was unprecedented. On this episode of Lab Culture, they share how they pioneered this valuable program and established a precedent for others.
Links:
Lead and Mercury Educational Materials (English)
Prenatal Screening Mercury Questionnaire
Boston Birth Cohort Study: Lead Paper
Boston Birth Cohort Study: Mercury Paper
CDC: Heavy Metals during Pregnancy
Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units (PEHSUs)
Lead and Mercury Educational Materials (Spanish)
Lead and Mercury Educational Materials (French Creole)
Lead and Mercury Educational Materials (Polish)
Lead and Mercury Educational Materials (Portuguese)
“New Jersey Laboratory Pioneers Prenatal Lead and Mercury Screening” (Lab Matters magazine)
Tue, 05 Oct 2021 - 1h 12min - 32 - A Conversation with Dr. Rick Bright
In October 2020, Dr. Rick Bright resigned in protest as director of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) because of the Trump administration’s political interference in the COVID-19 response and their efforts to spread dangerous misinformation. Since then, Dr. Bright has joined The Rockefeller Foundation as senior vice president of pandemic prevention and response. Dr. Bright joined APHL CEO Scott Becker for a discussion as part of APHL’s Member Assembly – this episode is a recording of that conversation.
Tue, 13 Jul 2021 - 52min - 31 - In pursuit of diversity, equity and inclusion in the public health laboratory
Diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) has been a major topic of discussion among APHL’s members, staff and partners as well as in the national discourse. Understanding the minority experience is important so that individual and systemic progress can be made. But what is it like for public health laboratory staff who identify as being in a minority group? The Emerging Leader Program’s (ELP) 13 Fall Cohort decided to tackle this topic as part of their final project. In this episode, four members of this cohort shared pieces of the conversations they had with their colleagues and their overall thoughts on DEI within the public health laboratory as a workplace.
The ELP 13-Fall Cohort is a larger group, but only four members participated in this episode. They are:
Chenelle Norman Association of Public Health Laboratories Newborn Screening and Genetics Manager, Newborn Screening Quality Improvement
Kim Smith Houston Health Department Quality and Compliance QA/QC Officer
Alyssa MacMillan New Jersey Department of Health Public Health & Environmental Laboratories Microbiology Program Manager
Jill Simonetti Minnesota Department of Health Public Health Laboratory Newborn Screening Operations Supervisor
Links:
How racism makes us sick | David R. Williams
“Why Diverse Teams Are Smarter” by David Rock and Heidi Grant
"Why The Phrase ‘Pull Yourself Up By Your Bootstraps’ Is Nonsense"
Lab Culture Ep. 9: What is the APHL Emerging Leader Program?
Lab Culture Ep. 10: Public health labs do that?!
Lab Culture Ep. 11: What if there were no public health labs?
Lab Culture Ep. 12: Bitten by the public health bug — How I found my lab niche
Mon, 22 Mar 2021 - 1h 12min - 30 - The Story Collider Presents: Pandemic Perspectives from the Public Health Laboratory
On August 27, 2020, APHL joined The Story Collider for a very special edition of their show featuring four true, personal stories about from APHL members about how COVID-19 has impacted their lives. This episode is a recording of that show. The Story Collider produces dozens of live shows all over the country, and recently has moved to an exciting online format.
Links
APHL.org The Story Collider September is Public Health Laboratory Appreciation Month APHL 2020 Virtual Conference
Fri, 11 Sep 2020 - 1h 57min - 29 - Life as a public health lab scientist testing for COVID-19
Jessica Bauer and Matt Sinn are scientists at the Missouri State Public Health Laboratory. On this episode, they shared their experiences performing COVID-19 testing, working long hours seven days a week, supporting their staff while trying not to burnout themselves. As they describe in this conversation, the experience has been nothing they ever could have expected.
Jessica Bauer, molecular unit chief Matthew Sinn, molecular laboratory manager
Links:
Missouri State Public Health Laboratory APHL: Responding to the COVID-19 Pandemic COVID-19 posts on APHLblog.org
Wed, 29 Jul 2020 - 51min - 28 - 2019 Year in Review
Are we already at the end of 2019?! While to many of us it felt like the year flew by, APHL staff, members and partners accomplished a LOT in an effort to protect the public's health. In this episode, Scott Becker, APHL's executive director, reviews some of the highlights of the year along with Gynene Sullivan, APHL's manager of communications, who is finalizing our Annual Report.
Follow APHL on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram so you don't miss anything!
Links:
APHL: Lung Injury Response Associated with Vaping
CDC: Outbreak of Lung Injury Associated with the Use of E-Cigarette, or Vaping, Products
Data: Elemental to Health advocacy campaign
Supporting rapid exchange of public health data is urgent, crucial and laden with challenges
Lab Matters (Fall 2019): Making Data Fly
APHL Newborn Screening Systems Quality Improvement Projects Award Recipients Announced
APHL Public Health Laboratory Fellowships
Lab Culture Ep. 9: What is the APHL Emerging Leader Program?
CDC: US Measles Cases and Outbreaks in 2019
“Launching Whole Genome Sequencing in the Public Health Realm” Lab Matters (Fall 2013)
Accreditation for Human and Animal Food Labs
Lab Culture Extra: Progress in Sierra Leone
APHL Global Health Program: Countries we serve
Global Laboratory Leadership Programme (GLLP)
Laboratory Response Network (LRN)
Lab Culture Ep. 20: 20 Years of the Laboratory Response Network
“Two Decades of Preparedness Excellence: The Laboratory Response Network” Lab Matters (Fall 2019)
The LRN’s job is to prepare, detect and respond. But what exactly does that mean?
Strengthening Lab Biosafety & Biosecurity
“Ensuring Readiness for Rabies in Puerto Rico” Lab Matters (Spring 2019)
In Puerto Rico, a new molecular bacteriology lab allows better control of foodborne outbreaks
“US officials identify 'strong culprit' in vaping illnesses” Associated Press (video interview)
Mon, 16 Dec 2019 - 1h 10min - 27 - 20 Years of the Laboratory Response Network (LRN)
This year marks 20 years since the inception of the Laboratory Response Network (LRN). Founded by APHL, CDC and the FBI, the LRN exists to protect the public from biological and chemical threats. How did the LRN get its start? And how has it evolved over the past 20 years? This episode of Lab Culture features an interview with two public health laboratory scientists and LRN experts.
Maureen “Moe” Sullivan Emergency Preparedness and Response Laboratory Supervisor Public Health Laboratory, Minnesota Department of Health
Stefan Saravia Biomonitoring and Emerging Contaminants Unit Supervisor Public Health Laboratory, Minnesota Department of Health
Links:
Minnesota Laboratory Emergency Preparedness About the Laboratory Response Network (APHL.org) The Laboratory Response Network Partners in Preparedness (CDC.gov) What is biomonitoring? (Video) “Pine County man charged with government center threats, more” (StarTribune)
Thu, 17 Oct 2019 - 51min - 26 - Lab Culture Extra: Progress in Sierra Leone
APHL has a long history of involvement in Sierra Leone where we’ve provided technical assistance to strengthen the nation’s laboratory system for over a decade. Following the 2014-2015 Ebola outbreak, we were invited back to build laboratory response capability for Ebola and other highly infectious diseases.
We found there was a lot to be done: a strategic plan for the laboratory system, renovation of the central lab, training and mentoring of lab staff, reducing turnaround time for Ebola testing, and much more.
With the engagement completed earlier this year, APHL Executive Director Scott Becker and Manager of Global Health Sherrie Staley share insights from APHL’s on-the-ground experience, which include the value of a healthy ram.
Links:
Photo album -- Progress in Sierra Leone
APHL joins partners in Sierra Leone to strengthen lab capacity in Ebola’s wake
High profile APHL team explores MOHS public health laboratory priority needs
APHL in Sierra Leone: Building a resilient lab system
Sierra Leone and Guinea: Building a resilient lab system
Wed, 21 Aug 2019 - 15min - 25 - Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha: Storytelling and the Flint Water Crisis
Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, author of What the Eyes Don't See: A Story of Crisis, Resistance, and Hope in an American City, joins us for an interview about the importance of storytelling in public health. Did Dr. Mona's successful use of narratives allow Flint's story to be as resilient as the people who lived it?
Links
Is water in Flint safe to drink? It’s not just a question of chemistry. [Op-ed by Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha]
What the Eyes Don't See: A Story of Crisis, Resistance, and Hope in an American City
Thu, 13 Jun 2019 - 19min - 24 - 2019 Annual Meeting: Day 3
Today was day three of the annual meeting! We started the day with awards ceremony and concluded with the member assembly, listening to many great speakers in between. For many, the highlight was the Dr. Katherine Kelley Distinguished Lecture delivered by Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha. Dr. Mona is a pediatrician, scientist, researcher, activist and author of What the Eyes Don’t See. Her research and the work of her team exposed the deliberate effort to cover up the Flint water crisis and the lead poisoning of Flint, Michigan's children.
APHL honors public health leaders at 2019 annual meeting
What the Eyes Don't See: A Story of Crisis, Resistance, and Hope in an American City
Thu, 06 Jun 2019 - 07min - 23 - 2019 APHL Annual Meeting: Day 2
It was another great day at the annual meeting in St. Louis! As the attendees interviewed on this episode will share, some of the highlights included Poster Speed Dating, learning about new technology from exhibitors and, of course, networking.
Follow #APHL on Twitter and Instagram for more updates!
Wed, 05 Jun 2019 - 05min - 22 - 2019 Annual Meeting: Day 1Tue, 04 Jun 2019 - 07min
- 21 - Alaska state virology lab: Freezing temps, wild animals, and extremely dedicated staff
Every area of our country is unique in ways that make public health laboratory work vary from one state or locality to another. But just as Alaska is different from the lower-48 states in most ways, their public health lab's work is too. Have you ever considered all the ways it might be different to work in the Alaska state lab in Fairbanks? This episode of Lab Culture reveals some of the many ways in which working in Alaska is unlike anywhere else.
Jayme Parker, manager, Virology Unit, Alaska State Public Health Laboratory (Fairbanks)
Nisha Fowler, microbiologist, Alaska State Public Health Laboratory (Fairbanks)
Links:
Virology Unit of the Alaska State Public Health Laboratory
Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities -- FAQs
Alaska's permafrost/ice lenses
Wed, 24 Apr 2019 - 43min - 20 - Lab Culture Extra: How the WI State Lab Developed a Test for Brodifacoum -- and Why It Matters
In the spring of 2018 patients suffering from profuse bleeding swamped emergency rooms in Illinois and Wisconsin. The cause? Synthetic cannabinoids laced with rat poison.
When an outbreak of contaminated synthetic cannabinoids reached Wisconsin in 2018, scientists at the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene (WSLH) rushed to develop the first quantitative method for diagnostic testing of brodifacoum, a powerful anticoagulant used in rat poison. Thanks to their work, patients with brodifacoum poisoning can now be treated with a precisely calibrated dose of vitamin K and that treatment can be ended when it is no longer medically necessary. Previously, physicians had to guess when to end treatment and re-start it if they guessed wrong.
WSLH’s Noel Stanton, Chemical Emergency Response Coordinator, and Bill Krick, an Advanced Chemist in the Chemical Emergency Response Unit, speak with Public Affairs Director Jan Klawitter about the test’s development and the outbreak that made it necessary.
Links:
Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene (WSLH)
Accolades for WSLH’s Chemical Emergency Response Team
Synthetic Cannabinoids (K2, Spice) – Wisconsin Department of Health Services
Lab Matters: Indiana and Wisconsin Respond to Synthetic Cannabinoid Contamination
Laboratory Response Network (LRN)
Wed, 03 Apr 2019 - 13min - 19 - Extra: Surge of West Nile Virus in North Dakota
What happens inside a public health lab when a health threat sends it into overdrive? Find out how the North Dakota lab met a surge in West Nile Virus in 2018 in this APHL in Action Lab Culture Extra.
Links:
CDC Preliminary Maps and Data for 2018, West Nile Virus
North Dakota Department of Health – West Nile Virus
Key Factors Influencing the Incidence of West Nile Virus in Burleigh County, North Dakota
Tue, 19 Feb 2019 - 11min - 18 - Exploring bioinformatics: From fellow to full time in Virginia
Kevin Libuit went from the APHL-CDC Bioinformatics Fellowship to a contractor to working full-time as a bioinformatician at the Virginia state lab (VA Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services (DCLS)). First he talks about when he discovered bioinformatics as a field and how the fellowship propelled his career. Then Kevin takes the mic and interviews Dr. Denise Toney, director of Virginia DCLS, about the value and growing need for bioinformaticians in public health labs.
Links
APHL-CDC Bioinformatics Fellowships
Virginia Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services (DCLS)
APHL Off the Bench (new Facebook group!)
Fri, 08 Feb 2019 - 1h 06min - 17 - Introducing: PKU Life Podcast with Kevin Alexander
Fifty-five years ago, newborn screening was born. At the time, though, that little heel prick was performed to screen for only one condition: phenylketonuria (PKU). Without early intervention, babies born with PKU faced severe cognitive, behavioral and other neurological disorders. The advent of PKU newborn screening allowed health care providers and families to make critical changes to a baby’s diet to prevent those consequences.
Today, December 3, is PKU Awareness Day. It’s hard to say where newborn screening would be without that first PKU test. And 55 years later, it’s hard to say where newborn screening would be without the families and individuals living with PKU who have shared their stories to convey the value of this simple test. One of those individuals is Kevin Alexander.
Kevin has been a leader in the PKU community simply by sharing his story and his experiences living with PKU. He has spoken at conferences and events around the world, created a video documentary about his life, served as a leader and friend to others living with PKU, and now he shares his voice in a new podcast.
For this PKU Awareness Day, we are sharing Kevin’s podcast, PKU Life Podcast with Kevin Alexander. We are so appreciative of Kevin’s willingness to both share with and listen to those in the newborn screening community. Kevin, thank you for your leadership, friendship and generosity!
PKU Life Podcast with Kevin Alexander – Facebook
PKU Life Podcast with Kevin Alexander – Instagram
PKU Life Podcast with Kevin Alexander – Twitter
APHL’s Newborn Screening Program
Mon, 03 Dec 2018 - 28min - 16 - Informatics, health equity and bat snuggles
Joanne Bartkus, APHL's board president and director of the Public Health Laboratory at the Minnesota Department of Health, sat down with Scott Becker, our executive director, and Gynene Sullivan, editor of Lab Matters magazine, to talk about priorities for the year. Their conversation ranged from informatics to health equity to... snuggling with a bat?!
Joanne Bartkus, PhD, D(ABMM) Director, Public Health Laboratory, Minnesota Department of Health
Scott J. Becker, MS Executive director, Association Public Health Laboratories @ScottJBecker
Links
Thu, 30 Aug 2018 - 20min - 15 - What a Day! Day 3 of the APHL Annual MeetingTue, 05 Jun 2018 - 03min
- 14 - Reporting from the Exhibit Hall: Day 2 of the APHL Annual Meeting
A huge component of any APHL Annual Meeting is the exhibit hall. This year we were joined by 68 exhibitors, all of whom were sharing new and interesting products, services and technologies with meeting attendees. In today's episode, we chat with representatives from Roche, Bio-Rad Laboratories and Hologic.
Learn more about APHL's corporate membership and other opportunities.
Mon, 04 Jun 2018 - 13min - 13 - Hello, Pasadena! Day 1 of the APHL Annual Meeting
We are in sunny Pasadena, California for the 2018 APHL Annual Meeting! Here is a little look at what we did on the first day. Stay tuned for updates every day through June 5.
2018 APHL Annual Meeting and Twelfth Government Environmental Laboratory Conference
Join the conversation using #APHL on:
Sun, 03 Jun 2018 - 06min - 12 - Bitten by the public health bug: How I found my lab niche
The people who work in public health laboratories make a difference in your community daily. In this third episode, members of the Emerging Leader Program cohort 10 sit down with their peers to hear how their public health laboratory careers have made an impact.
ELP cohort 10 members featured in this episode:
Dana White has been working in the public health lab for 16 years and is now the state training coordinator at the Mississippi Public Health Lab. Dr.Ona Adair has been working in the public health lab for nine years and is now the Chemistry Division director at the South Carolina Public Health Laboratory. Dr. Harmeet Kaur worked in the Placer County Public Health Laboratory for four years and is currently a LabAspire Assistant Director Fellow. Kristen Durie has been working in the public health lab for six years and is now the chemistry quality assurance manager at the New York State Food Laboratory. Matt Bradke has been working in the public health lab for 16 years and is now the chemical terrorism laboratory supervisor at the Arkansas Public Health Laboratory.Interviewees:
Degina Booker has been working in the public health lab for 40 years and is now the administrative services director for the Mississippi Public Health Lab. Dr. Burton Wilcke, Jr., now retired, has worked in public health laboratories for over 35 years in Vermont, Michigan and California. Dr. Wilcke remains active in the public health laboratory community as a member of both the APHL Workforce Development Committee and the Global Health Committee. Dr. Musau WaKabongo, now retired, was the Public Health Laboratory Director at the Placer County Public Health Laboratory and has worked in several public health laboratories in California for 13 years. Dr. Maria Ishida has been working in public health for 11 years and is now the director of the New York State Food Laboratory.Are you thinking about a career in a public health laboratory?
APHL’s professional development resources APHL Job Center Blog posts on workforce and professional developmentThu, 24 May 2018 - 49min - 11 - What if there were no public health labs?
Maybe the saying is true: you don’t know what you had until it is gone. For the families in this episode, the absence of public health laboratories turned their worlds upside down and negatively impacted both the present and future. These families represent us all and highlight the vulnerabilities that would exist if there were no public health laboratories working continuously to keep our communities and populations safe.
This is the second episode in the series produced by members of the Emerging Leader Program cohort 10.
Emerging Infectious Disease Response:
APHL’s Infectious Disease Program
Laboratory Response Network (LRN)
Interviewer: Kate Wainwright, PhD, D(ABMM), HCLD (ABB), MPH, MSN, RN, deputy director, Public Health Protection and Laboratory Services, Indiana State Department of Health
Expert: Peter Shult, PhD, director, Communicable Disease Division; associate director, Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Newborn Screening:
APHL’s Newborn Screening Program
Interviewer: Josh Rowland, MBA, MT(ASCP), manager, Training and Workforce Development, Association of Public Health Laboratories
Expert: Miriam Schachter, PhD, research scientist 3, New Jersey Department of Health, Newborn Screening Laboratory
Foodborne Illness:
5 Things You Didn’t Know (but Need to Know) About Listeria
Interviewer: Samir Patel, PhD, FCCM, (D)ABMM, clinical microbiologist, Public Health Ontario; Toronto, Canada
Expert: Vanessa Allen, MD, MPH, medical microbiologist, chief of microbiology, Public Health Ontario; Toronto, Canada
Narrator: Erin Bowles, B.S., MT(ASCP), Wisconsin Clinical Laboratory Network coordinator and co-biosafety officer, Communicable Disease Division, Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Contributor: Emily Travanty, PhD, scientific director, Laboratory Services Division, Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
Special thanks to Jim Hermanson at the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene for his help in recording this episode.
Thu, 17 May 2018 - 59min - 10 - Public health labs do that?!
Public health laboratories do a great deal of work that impacts the daily lives of everyone in America. Do you know exactly how much they’re doing? The first episode produced by members of the Emerging Leader Program cohort 10 looks at some of the work performed by public health lab scientists.
(*indicates ELP cohort 10 member)
Water Quality Testing
Interviewer: *Amanda Hughes, program manager of ambient air quality monitoring, State Hygienic Lab at the University of Iowa
Experts: Michael Schueller, assistant director of operations, State Hygienic Lab at the University of Iowa Nancy Hall, program manager, Environmental Microbiology, State Hygienic Lab at the University of Iowa
Water quality testing at the State Hygienic Lab at the University of Iowa
Alcohol Testing
Interviewer: *Gitika Panicker, microbiologist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Expert: Laura Bailey, director, Office of Alcohol Testing, Arkansas State Public Health Laboratory
Alcohol testing at the Arkansas State Public Health Laboratory
Influenza Testing
Interviewer: *Shondra Johnson, laboratory information management system administrator, Missouri State Public Health Laboratory
Expert: Jessica Bauer, molecular unit manager, Missouri State Public Health Laboratory
Seasonal influenza testing at the Missouri State Public Health Laboratory
Bioterrorism
Interviewer: Avi Singh, food lab lead microbiologist, Washington State Public Health Laboratory
Expert: *Denny Russell, bioterrorism coordinator, Washington State Public Health Laboratory
Foodborne Outbreak Linked to Flour
Interviewer: *Rebecca Lindsey, Whole Genome Sequence Project lead, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Experts:
Heather A. Carleton, bioinformatics team lead, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Samuel J. Crowe, National Outbreak Reporting System team lead, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
E. coli outbreak linked to flour (CDC)
Shiga Toxin–Producing E. coli Infections Associated with Flour
Wed, 25 Apr 2018 - 1h 12min - 9 - What is the APHL Emerging Leader Program?Mon, 23 Apr 2018 - 15min
- 8 - Leaders for a TB Free World
Every year on March 24, APHL recognizes World TB Day, a day to focus on the valuable work of our members and partners. While tuberculosis is often considered a disease of the past, it is resurging and presenting significant new public health challenges including drug resistance. This World TB Day, we are sharing an insightful conversation between two TB laboratory leaders: Dr. Marie-Claire Rowlinson, assistant laboratory director, Bureau of Public Health Laboratories, Florida Department of Health and Dr. Beverly Metchock, team lead, TB Reference Laboratory, CDC Division of Tuberculosis Elimination.
Links
National Tuberculosis Controllers Association
The Tenacity of Tuberculosis: MDR-TB (blog post)
Fri, 23 Mar 2018 - 29min - 7 - APHL's International Team Meeting
In November, Scott Becker, APHL’s executive director, traveled to Johannesburg, South Africa for the second APHL International Team Meeting. While he was there, he sat down with five members of the APHL international team to discuss their work and what led them to pursue a career in laboratory science.
The APHL International Team Meeting allows for US-based APHL leadership and global health program staff and consultants working in-country to discuss organizational operations and key programmatic successes and challenges. In most cases, this is the only time during the year that these individuals have an opportunity to meet face-to-face. Participants from Zambia, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Guinea, Sierra Leone and APHL’s US headquarters were all in attendance.
Interviews include:
Levi Vere, Laboratory Quality Monitoring Manager, APHL Zimbabwe Shanette Nixon, Global Health Consultant, APHL Esther Vitto, Laboratory Program Support, APHL Sierra Leone Mohamed Fofanah, Associate Specialist, Administration and Finance, APHL Sierra Leone Rufus Nyaga, LIS Technical Consultant and Project Manager, APHL KenyaThu, 21 Dec 2017 - 34min - 6 - What is the Biosafety Peer Network?
The Biosafety Peer Network (aka the Visiting Biosafety Official Program) links US local, state, and territorial public health laboratories with US-affiliated Pacific Island laboratories to facilitate mentoring and information sharing among biosafety officials and officers. The exchange is intended to foster a collaborative community, advance biosafety and biosecurity in laboratories, and ultimately improve public health laboratory biosafety and biosecurity across the US. So what exactly does the Biosafety Peer Network do? Three members of this network -- Rebecca Sciulli (Hawaii), Paul Fox (Hawaii) and Anne Marie Santos (Guam) sat down for a conversation about their work.
Photo: Paul Fox (left) and Rebecca Sciulli (center) giving Anne Marie Santos (right) a tour of the Hawaii Laboratories Division facility to showcase their biosafety practices, as part of the Peer Network program.
Links
Biosafety Peer Network Program Application
Laboratory Biosafety & Biosecurity Resources
Biosafety & Biosecurity Training
Tue, 24 Oct 2017 - 36min - 5 - My Niece's Positive Newborn Screen
Four years ago, as APHL joined with partners to celebrate the 50th anniversary of routine newborn screening in the United States, newborn screening hit more closely for APHL staff than it ever had before. Michelle Forman, manager of media and Lab Culture host, received a text that her new niece, Sloane, had a positive newborn screen. Her results were out of range for PKU. In this episode, Michelle interviews Sloane's mom, Judith Forman, about that experience.
Newborn Screening Gets Personal: My Niece’s Positive Screen Classic Phenylketonuria (PKU) Benign Hyperphenylalaninemia (Hyper-Phe) APHL's Newborn Screening & Genetics Program What is newborn screening? FAQsTue, 05 Sep 2017 - 16min - 4 - Past, Present and Future of PulseNet
PulseNet revolutionized foodborne outbreak detection in the United States. What exactly is it? How did it get started? Why was it so significant? And what does the future of foodborne outbreak detection look like? Brian Sauders, molecular microbiologist at the NY State Department of Agriculture and Markets, and Shari Shea, director of food safety at APHL, answer these questions and more.
Links:
20 years of PulseNet: Preventing thousands of illnesses and saving millions of dollars (cost-benefit analysis)
Innovations in American Government Award
CBS News article on PulseNet launch including quotes from Al Gore
Laboratory Response Network (LRN)
New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets, Division of Food Laboratory
APHL-CDC Infectious Diseases Laboratory Fellowship
Wed, 24 May 2017 - 54min - 3 - APHL Marches for Science
APHL was an official and proud partner of the March for Science! We spoke with two people who joined us on Saturday, April 22 about why they were marching for science.
Links:
APHL's March for Science photo album
Official March for Science website
Everything you need for Lab Week 2017
Wed, 26 Apr 2017 - 10min - 2 - Hill Day 2017
On March 6, a small group of APHL members and our policy staff visited House and Senate offices as part of our annual Hill Day. Peter Kyriacopoulos, APHL’s senior director of public policy, interviewed the group following their meetings to get their immediate thoughts.
Links:
ELC Program: Essential Funding for Public Health Lab Response
Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity fact sheet
Hill Day group:
Chris Whelen – laboratory director, Hawaii Department of Health State Laboratories Division
Jennifer Rakeman – assistant commissioner, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
Denise Toney – director, Virginia Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services
Peter Kyriacopoulos – senior director of public policy, APHL
Celia Hagan – manager of public policy, APHL
Nisha Quasba – public policy intern, APHL
Tue, 21 Mar 2017 - 20min - 1 - Critical Consequences
Did you know that the Affordable Care Act (ACA, aka Obamacare) includes critical public health funding? What would the repeal of the ACA mean for public health? Peter Kyriacopoulos, APHL’s senior director of public policy, talks about the CDC-managed Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) program, a source of crosscutting support for public health laboratories funded under the ACA through the Prevention and Public Health Fund (PPHF).
Links:
ELC Program: Essential Funding for Public Health Lab Response (APHL.org)
Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) Cooperative Agreement (CDC.gov)
Critical Public Health Fund Would Be Lost With ACA Repeal
Find your State or Territorial Health Official
Peter Kyriacopoulos on Twitter
Wed, 15 Feb 2017 - 25min
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