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MDHHS appeals federal ruling on infant blood sampling

File - This July 2022 photo shows a lab in Lansing, Mich., where the state health department tests blood from newborns for more than 50 rare diseases.
Joey Cappelletti/Report for America via AP
File - This July 2022 photo shows a lab in Lansing, Mich., where the state health department tests blood from newborns for more than 50 rare diseases.

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, or M-D-H-H-S, is appealing a federal court ruling over its infant blood sampling program.

It’s been longstanding state practice to screen blood samples from newborn babies for various medical conditions.

Last month, a federal district judge found M-D-H-H-S may have violated the U-S Constitution while storing and distributing some of those samples and related data without informed parental consent.

The argument rested on Fourth and 14th Amendment claims dealing with illegal searches and seizures and equal protection.

The court ordered M-D-H-H-S to give the plaintiffs the option of having the samples and data returned, destroyed, or to provide informed consent.

Now the state health department and its sampling facilities are appealing that ruling, saying the state is committed to protecting “the health and well-being of all Michigan’s residents.”

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