Yated Why would a mistaken diagnosis in a case of reported neonatal herpes
make headlines anywhere - especially if no adverse health consequences
resulted from the error? Yet a false positive diagnosis of this nature,
recently reported by the Rockland County Department of Health, has
stirred profound interest in the Orthodox community.
That’s because the erroneous diagnosis involved a Jewish baby boy
who had undergone bris milah with metzitzah b’peh and was brought to a
NYC hospital with a respiratory infection. He was immediately tested for
neonatal herpes, although no symptoms of the virus were present. To the
parents’ surprise, the test was positive.
Weeks later, to the
family’s relief, those findings were discredited in a most unusual way -
through a landmark DNA testing program in existence for only two years.
The baby’s long hospitalization and treatment for herpes turned out to
be totally unnecessary.
This strange turn of events has raised
questions about other City-reported cases of herpes. In view of the
DOH’s relentless efforts to cast mbp as deadly to babies, the discovery
that the “positive” was a false-positive has fueled suspicions that
other reported cases of HSV-1 infections following bris milah might have
also been false-positive.
Perhaps even more newsworthy, the findings of a misdiagnosis also
revealed the existence of the trailblazing DNA testing program quietly
launched in Rockland County in 2013 to track the source of herpes
infection in infants.
This extraordinary program was formed by
the Rockland County Department of Health working in close cooperation
with the Orthodox Jewish community.
The DNA program - the very
first of its kind anywhere - can track the source of HSV-1 by comparing
samples of the virus in the afflicted infant with samples of DNA from
the mohel, the baby’s parents and the main caregivers. The testing is
done in the State’s Wadsworth Laboratory in Albany, the one facility in
New York - and perhaps in the country - that performs DNA testing of
this nature. [...]
To start the discussion, I will note that this was posted two days ago, and no one has commented yet.
ReplyDeleteI wonder where all those posters, who regularly bash "metzitza b'peh", are hiding out. Where are these guys now???
Maybe they're flat on their face, after the rug was pulled out from under their feet...