Health
SACRAMENTO – California Health and Human Services Secretary Diana S. Dooley, California Department of Public Health Director and State Health Officer Ron Chapman, and the Association of Public Health Laboratories were joined by families and champions of newborn screening at the Capitol on Wednesday to celebrate 50 years of saving and improving lives through the California Newborn Screening Program (NBS).
Since 1980, the NBS has screened approximately 17 million babies and expanded the screening panel from three genetic diseases to 80 different disorders.
“Every parent wants to ensure that their newborn is perfectly healthy and the NBS program is helping more families do just that,” said Secretary Dooley. “The program has been credited with saving lives and preventing disability for thousands of newborns.”
“Most babies who have one of the disorders look and act like healthy newborns. Most families have no family history of the disorder. By the time symptoms are visible, irreversible damage has already occurred. Early diagnosis and treatment is the best way to prevent that,” said Dr. Chapman. “We are grateful for the strides made in technology that have led to lives saved and physical, emotional and financial pain spared through screening.”
The mission of the California NBS program is to reduce the emotional and financial burden of disability and death caused by genetic and congenital disorders.
NBS protects the health of all its newborns and is an essential preventive public health measure. Since 1966, state law requires that all babies born in California be tested before leaving the hospital.
The California Newborn Screening Program is one of the largest in the world, and screens one out of every eight babies born in the U.S. More than 13,500 children with a serious genetic condition have been diagnosed, treated and are living healthy and productive lives because early identification and treatment.
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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Partnership HealthPlan of California (PHC) announced that pediatrician Jeffrey Ribordy has been selected as the new regional medical director for Humboldt-Del Norte-Western Trinity counties.
He will be working two days per week in PHC’s future Eureka office, starting in September.
Dr. Ribordy has worked for the past 15 years at Eureka Pediatrics, a rural health clinic with offices in Eureka and McKinleyville.
He graduated from the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, and completed his residency at Children’s Hospital in Oakland. He has a master's of public health from the University of California at Berkeley.
He has served in a number of leadership roles in the medical community, including serving on the credentials and medical executive committees at St. Joseph Hospital in Eureka, the North Coast Health Information Network Board of Directors, Changing Tides Family Services Board of Directors, and the Public Service and Medical Ethics Committee of the Humboldt-Del Norte Medical Society. He is well-respected and well-liked by physicians and non-physicians in the community.
Dr. Ribordy’s major responsibilities will include utilization management reviews, representing PHC in the local medical community, and communication with physicians around quality improvement and utilization management activities.
Partnership HealthPlan of California is the county organized health system selected by the state of California to provide a Medi-Cal Managed Care delivery system to eight new counties, starting on Sept. 1, 2013.
The new counties are Humboldt, Del Norte, Trinity, Siskiyou, Shasta, Modoc, Lassen and Lake. The organization currently serves six counties: Solano, Napa, Yolo, Sonoma, Marin and Mendocino.
Partnership HealthPlan of California began operating in 1994. Additional information about PHC can be found at www.partnershiphp.org .
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