Legislature(1995 - 1996)

04/29/1996 09:09 AM Senate HES

Audio Topic
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
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          HB 529 APPROVE CENTRALIZED PUBLIC HEALTH LAB                        
                                                                              
 Number 002                                                                    
                                                                               
 CHAIRMAN GREEN called the Senate Health, Education and Social                 
 Services (HESS) Committee to order at 9:09 a.m. and introduced                
 HB 529  as the first order of business before the committee.                  
                                                                               
 COMMISSIONER KAREN PERDUE, Department of Health & Social Services,            
 emphasized that the public health laboratory is one of the most               
 essential pieces of a public health system.  Every state has a                
 public health laboratory, Alaska has three.  Alaska's public health           
 laboratories were established as regional labs in the 1930s and               
 1940s due to the technology and transportation of that time.                  
 Technology and transportation has improved which has lead the labs            
 in Alaska to serve a specialized function.  The Anchorage                     
 laboratory processes about 60 percent of all the samples in the               
 state, the Fairbanks lab processes about 30 percent, and the Juneau           
 lab processes about 10 percent of the samples.  The labs are in               
 leased facilities.                                                            
                                                                               
 Number 050                                                                    
                                                                               
 Commissioner Perdue said that the Anchorage and Juneau labs are not           
 safe, the labs do not meet health codes, and they are unsafe for              
 people to work in.  The buildings were not designed to support                
 laboratory functions.  These labs present some risks to the                   
 employees and the public.  She noted that the Fairbanks facility              
 was designed as a lab and is a safe facility, however, it has                 
 limitations for future growth.  Commissioner Perdue informed the              
 committee that a State Medical Examiner's System is being developed           
 and is currently located in the crime lab in Anchorage.  She                  
 expressed the desire to incorporate the state medical examiner into           
 the state laboratory function which could be accomplished with the            
 new building.                                                                 
                                                                               
 Commissioner Perdue discussed the history of public health in                 
 Alaska when pointing out that the core responsibility to protect              
 public health has not changed.  When there is a threat to public              
 health, it must be presented to the executive branch and the                  
 legislature.  Furthermore, Commissioner Perdue felt that as an                
 employer, if she felt that her employees were not working in a safe           
 environment then that must be presented as well.  She also believed           
 that she should point out any possible cost efficient measures that           
 could be taken.  HB 529 addresses all three of those issues.  There           
 have been 14 separate studies of the laboratory system since                  
 Commissioner Perdue has been involved with the department; each of            
 the studies have shown that something must be done.  There is no              
 longer the need to study this issue.                                          
                                                                               
 Number 091                                                                    
                                                                               
 With regards to the Fairbanks laboratory, it is not a feasible                
 option in the long-term.  The Anchorage situation must be                     
 addressed.  Commissioner Perdue explained that in the last 10                 
 years, each time this matter was discussed nothing was resolved               
 because the regional differences could not be worked out.                     
 Therefore, the most critical issues in Anchorage and Juneau have              
 not been addressed.  Under any plan by the department, the lab                
 would not be built until the year 2,000 when attrition plans would            
 be created.  Commissioner Perdue believed that no one would lose              
 their job in an untimely manner.  Through attrition, no one would             
 lose their job if they would transfer.                                        
                                                                               
 SENATOR LEMAN asked if any of the public health functions in other            
 states were contracted.  Would that be a possibility?                         
                                                                               
 Number 130                                                                    
                                                                               
 DR. GREG HAYES, Chief of Laboratories for DHSS, informed the                  
 committee that no core laboratory functions are contracted.                   
 However, every public health lab does contract some work.  For                
 example, the Environmental Lab contracts for work that they are not           
 capable of performing; it would not be cost effective for the lab             
 to perform that work.  There are core functions of tests, state               
 regulatory functions, which are not contracted in any state.                  
                                                                               
 SENATOR LEMAN inquired as to why these functions cannot be                    
 contracted.  DR. GREG HAYES explained that the state is responsible           
 for many regulatory activities which is difficult to contract and             
 have oversight.  There are many costs associated with oversight.              
                                                                               
 DR. JOHN MIDDAUGH, Chief of the Epidemiology Section of DHSS,                 
 identified one of the key functions of a state public health lab as           
 maintaining special expertise and capacity to protect the public.             
 The tests that are done may not occur frequently, but require much            
 expertise.  Dr. Middaugh used diphtheria and tuberculosis as an               
 example.  A certain number of tests must be run in order to                   
 maintain a high level of confidence in the result; those results              
 determine public health decisions.  Dr. Middaugh discussed some               
 examples of the need to run many tests in order to maintain a high            
 level of confidence.  Today's technology also helps track and                 
 fingerprint viruses.  In conclusion, Dr. Middaugh emphasized that             
 the functions of state medical laboratories are important as well             
 as their expertise and capacity to respond.                                   
                                                                               
 Number 272                                                                    
                                                                               
 SENATOR LEMAN said that he was impressed with the state laboratory            
 and Dr. Middaugh's work.  He asked if there were any other medical            
 laboratories in the state and if there was a sharing of specialist            
 in order to avoid duplication when the test may occur so                      
 infrequently.  DR. GREG HAYES acknowledged that testing is                    
 available in the private sector.  Often that technology would be              
 transferred to the private sector.  Dr. Hayes pointed out that the            
 state lab tries to maintain communicable disease testing and the              
 latest technology.                                                            
                                                                               
 DR. JOHN MIDDAUGH said that the state lab works closely with many             
 of the private labs around the state.  Some of the tests these labs           
 offer are not offered by the state medical lab.  The state lab                
 serves as a reference lab for all the private labs.  He pointed out           
 that the state lab can do serial groupings which the private labs             
 cannot.  It would be unethical for private hospitals to fingerprint           
 antibiotic resistance tests because that would not help the                   
 patient, but it is a core public health function to target better             
 intervention.  There are 650 infectious and controlled communicable           
 diseases known to man which are adopted in the state laboratory               
 regulations for surveillance.                                                 
                                                                               
 Number 328                                                                    
                                                                               
 COMMISSIONER PERDUE emphasized that the state medical lab looks for           
 trends.  If the public health system works, no one notices; but if            
 it does not work, it could effect our economy.  The public health             
 system needs to be ready for the future.                                      
                                                                               
 SENATOR LEMAN asked if the other facilities the state works with              
 such as Alaska Regional Providence support this centralized lab in            
 Anchorage.  DR. JOHN MIDDAUGH replied yes.  The State Medical                 
 Association passed a formal resolution in support of HB 529 and the           
 efforts to obtain the funds for the new lab.  In response to                  
 Senator Leman, COMMISSIONER PERDUE said that the preferred location           
 of the lab would be next to the crime lab.                                    
                                                                               
 SENATOR LEMAN said that he was satisfied with the networking being            
 done between the state and private medical labs.                              
                                                                               
 DR. JOHN MIDDAUGH reiterated that all states maintain a central               
 core public health laboratory.                                                
                                                                               
 CHAIRMAN GREEN assumed that the state lab was obliged to be                   
 connected with the nationwide disease control centers.  DR. GREG              
 HAYES informed the committee that data is transferred on a daily              
 basis.                                                                        
                                                                               
 SENATOR LEMAN asked if the Municipality of Anchorage had a public             
 health laboratory.  DR. JOHN MIDDAUGH replied no, the municipality            
 uses the states.                                                              
                                                                               
 SENATOR SALO commented that HB 529 is an excellent bill.  She                 
 inquired as to why it would take until the year 2,000 to begin.               
 COMMISSIONER PERDUE explained that this would begin from the very             
 beginning.  No design work has been done.  There is a fair amount             
 of complicated design work for this building.                                 
                                                                               
 CHAIRMAN GREEN announced that the department requested that HB 529            
 be held until Wednesday.                                                      

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