O’Mara co-sponsoring new legislative package to combat Lyme and tick-borne diseases: Legislation follows recommendations of Senate task force
January 10, 2018
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ISSUE:
- Lyme and Tick-Borne Diseases
Albany, N.Y., January 10—State Senator Tom O’Mara (R,C,I-Big Flats), a member of the Senate Task Force on Lyme and Tick-Borne Diseases (TBDs), is co-sponsoring a legislative package developed by the task force to significantly increase reporting and enhance critical research, education, and awareness initiatives.
“We’ve taken important actions over the past few years to strengthen the state’s overall response to spread of Lyme and other tick-borne diseases, but much more needs to be done, particularly in the areas of reporting, testing and treatment, and education and awareness. These new proposals would greatly strengthen New York’s short- and long-term strategies,” said O’Mara.
At a task force hearing last summer, State Health Commissioner Howard Zucker testified that while over 8,000 cases of Lyme and TBDs are reported annually in New York, “there are undoubtedly many more cases, particularly of Lyme disease, that are treated by community physicians and are not reported, or do not meet the case definition.”
The legislative package O’Mara co-sponsors would:
> create a pilot program for Lyme and TBD testing in children (Senate Bill No. 7169). The proposed program would facilitate the ability of children with certain diagnoses that show symptoms similar to Lyme and other TBDs to be voluntarily tested for TBDs. Experts note that children between the ages of 5 to 7 have the highest rate of contracting Lyme disease. Targeting at-risk populations can help ensure early diagnosis and treatment;
>create a “Mental Health Impacts Report” (S7171) and require the state to conduct an impact study considering how infectious diseases and blood-borne pathogens, including Lyme and TBDs, may have correlations with mental illness in infected individuals. The new report would enable better treatment of the mental health consequences associated with these infections;
> improve post-mortem reporting of Lyme and TBDs (S7168). Those responsible for conducting post-mortem examinations would be required to report to the state Department of Health (DOH) any time they discover that the deceased individual was afflicted with Lyme or any TBD at the time of death. This reporting will help improve the accuracy of Lyme and TBDs statistics; and
> establish an expert-based Lyme and TBDs Working Group (S7170) to review current best practices for the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of Lyme and TBDs.
O’Mara said that the Senate’s latest legislative package is a product of recommendations first made in a Task Force report released last October, “ "Ticking Time Bomb: An Update on the Lyme and Tick-Borne Disease Epidemic in New York State." The full Senate report can be viewed HERE.