At the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, we strive to keep our prices low. We understand how rate increases may impact your business operations. From time to time, it becomes necessary for us to increase our prices to keep our not-for-profit laboratory financially stable. Effective January 1, 2019, we will increase some of our prices. We want to thank you for your understanding, and we look forward to serving you in the years to come. If you have any questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact WSLH Chief Financial Officer Kevin Karbowski at kevin.karbowski@slh.wisc.edu or (608) 265-4511.
2018 Holiday Schedule
Please note the following changes to the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene’s operations due to the observance of the Christmas and New Year’s holidays.
The table below lists the hours of operations for our Clinical Specimen Receiving department. We will have staffing to accept clinical specimens at both our 2601 Agriculture Drive and our 465 Henry Mall facilities.
As always, if you have an off-hours emergency, please call the WSLH Emergency Pager at 608-263-3280.
| DATE |
2601 Agriculture Drive Clinical Specimen Receiving Direct Phone: 608-224-4229 |
465 Henry Mall Clinical Specimen Receiving Direct Phone for Saturdays/Holidays: 608-262-5817 |
| Monday, December 24, 2018 – Christmas Eve | 6:00 AM – 12:00 Noon | 6:30 AM – 12:00 Noon |
| Tuesday, December 25, 2018 – Christmas Day | CLOSED | CLOSED |
| Monday, December 31, 2018 – New Year’s Eve | 6:00 AM – 12:00 Noon | 6:30 AM – 12:00 Noon |
| Tuesday, January 1, 2019 – New Year’s Day | CLOSED | CLOSED |
Webinar: Fake Dope and Rat Poison – Bleeding Disorders Associated with the use of Synthetic Marijuana in WI
Earlier this year, patients began arriving in Chicago emergency rooms with unexplained bleeding. A link was made to the use of synthetic marijuana products, and the discovery of brodifacoum – a powerful anticoagulant and rat poison – was found to be the cause. This outbreak soon spread to Wisconsin and other states. In response, WSLH chemists developed a test to quantify brodifacoum in patients and added new information for diagnosis and patient management.
In this webinar, WSLH Chemical Response Coordinator Noel Stanton explains the history of the outbreak, the characteristics of this chemical exposure, and the unique role the WSLH is playing in the response.
Listen to the webinar: https://slhstream2.ad.slh.wisc.edu/Mediasite/Play/35e5ce9959ce494b9fb05d30442be8aa1d
Wednesday Nite @ the Lab Commemorates 1918 Pandemic Centennial
2018 marks the 100th anniversary of the devastating 1918 influenza pandemic that killed tens of millions worldwide. To commemorate the centennial, UW’s Wednesday Nite @ the Lab (WN@TL) hosted a series of talks this fall looking back at various aspects of the 1918 pandemic and looking forward into the future. WSLH Communicable Disease Division Director Dr. Pete Shult co-presented one of the talks.
100+ Years of Influenza Research at UW – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RhBhfxylPFs
Bernard Easterday, Yoshihiro Kawaoka and Chris Olsen of the University of Wisconsin School of Veterinary Medicine share 100+ years of influenza research at the University of Wisconsin
Influenza: It’s Not Only About Pandemics – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKOqwv7J-dg
Pete Shult (WSLH Communicable Disease Division) and Tom Haupt (WI Division of Public Health) describe how 10 decades of wrangling with the antigenic drift, the antigenic shift, and the host-hopping of the flu virus have challenged public health agencies to invent and refine strategies to manage seasonal influenza and other emerging viruses.
UW and Madison and the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrkHq6A6DWs
Steve Oreck of the UW-Madison Department of History explores how the SATC (Student Army Training Corps) for World War I impacted the UW campus and Madison when the flu arrived just in time for fall semester 1918.
Kaitlin Sundling wins ASC Foundation’s “Shark Tank” competition
Cytotechnology Certificate Program Director Kaitlin Sundling, MD, PhD, won the American Society of Cytopathology Foundation’s “Shark Tank” Young Investigator Grant competition with her pitch – “Development of a Deep Learning Image Analysis System for Improved Cytology Screening.”
From a large field of applicants, proposals from 12 semifinalists were evaluated and 3 young researchers were chosen to present in front of the society at its annual meeting in November.
Kaitlin was awarded a two-year $50,000 grant to be used toward her research creating a machine learning prescreening algorithm for cytology.
In this video, Kaitlin preps for competition and explains her research idea — https://vimeo.com/297367355
Economic Benefits of the OSHA On-Site Consultation Program – Summary
Summary from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) published a working paper showing that the agency’s On-Site Consultation Program generates national economic benefits of approximately $1.3 billion per year.
The OSHA On-Site Consultation Program offers no-cost and confidential occupational safety and health services to small and medium-sized businesses in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and several U.S. territories with priority given to high-hazard worksites. (In Wisconsin, the WisCon program is part of the WSLH’s Occupational Safety and Health Division.)
On-Site Consultation services are separate from enforcement and do not result in penalties or citations. Consultants from local agencies or universities work with employers to identify workplace hazards, provide advice for compliance with OSHA standards, and assist in establishing and improving safety and health programs.
OSHA routinely performs rigorous economic analysis of agency regulations. OSHA economists performed a similar analysis of On-Site Consultation, based on established economic principles and widely recognized values, such as the Value of a Statistical Injury (VSI).
The economists considered three distinct models for determining the economic contributions of On-Site Consultation:
- A one-time, one-year safety and health management program;
- A Hazard-reduction exercise; and
- An OSHA enforcement inspection.
Ultimately, the agency determined that a one-time, one-year safety and health management program most closely aligns with the services provided by the On-Site Consultation Program. Using conservative estimates based on the avoidance of OSHA recordable injuries and illnesses (not including fatalities prevented or prevention of delayed-onset illnesses) and looking at benefits to employers, workers’ compensation systems, and the workers themselves, OSHA developed the following breakdown of the benefits the OSHA On-Site Consultation Program provides to the national economy.
Annual Benefits of the OSC Program*
|
Covered Workers
|
1,260,932 |
| Estimated Injuries per Year | 37,828 |
| Injuries Prevented by OSC Program Visits | 9,457 |
| Value of Avoided Injury per Injury | $77,000 |
| Workers’ Compensation Cost per Injury | $30,526 |
| Benefits to Workers from Avoided Injuries | $728,188,374 |
| Benefits to the Workers’ Compensation System from Reduced Claims | $288,684,134 |
| Benefits to Employers from Avoided Indirect Costs | $317,552,547 |
| Total | $1,334,425,056 |
*Totals may not sum due to rounding
For the full paper, please see: https://www.osha.gov/dcsp/smallbusiness/2018_Benefits_OSHA_On-Site_Consultation_Program_Economic_Analysis.pdf
Thanksgiving 2018 Holiday Hours
The Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene will be closed on Thursday, November 22, for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Our Specimen Receiving departments will observe the following hours of operation for the Thanksgiving holiday:
| 2601 Agriculture Drive – Specimen Receiving |
|
| DATE | HOURS |
| Thursday, 11/22, Thanksgiving Day | Closed |
| Friday, 11/23 | 6 AM – 4:30 PM |
| Saturday, 11/24 | 6:30 AM – 12:30 PM |
| 465 Henry Mall – Specimen Receiving |
|
| DATE | HOURS |
| Thursday, 11/22, Thanksgiving Day | Closed |
| Friday, 11/23 | 6 AM – 4:30 PM |
| Saturday, 11/24 | 6:30 AM – 12 PM (Noon) |
WSLH Responds to Synthetic Cannabinoid Contamination
Stories about people being hospitalized for and even dying from severe bleeding after using synthetic cannabinoids have filled the news since March 2018.
The responsible agent was determined to be brodifacoum, a powerful anticoagulant. The Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene (WSLH) Chemical Response Program developed and implemented a quantitative test method for brodifacoum in blood, which is being used to diagnose and guide treatment length for patients.
The WSLH’s and Indiana State Department of Health laboratory’s involvement in these cases is featured in the Summer 2018 issue of the Association of Public Health Laboratories Lab Matters magazine – https://view.joomag.com/lab-matters-summer-2018/0966891001535548469/p16?short
Latest information on cases – Wisconsin Department of Health Services – https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/chemical/synthetic-cannabinoids.htm
The WSLH Chemical Emergency Response Team received an award from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s national Laboratory Response Network (LRN) for their rapid response to the ongoing brodifacoum exposures – https://www.slh.wisc.edu/accolades-for-wslhs-chemical-emergency-response-team/
Legionella PCR (test MP00421) Discontinued
Legionella PCR testing has been discontinued. The PCR test is designed to detect Legionella spp. at the genus level. To best meet our program needs, we request that you submit a primary specimen for Legionella Culture or submit a Legionella isolate grown at your laboratory so we can also type the organism for epidemiologic purposes.
If you have questions, please call Dr. Allen Bateman at 608-224-4254.
Webinar: Newborn Screening Responds to Concerns through Training
WSLH Newborn Screening Laboratory Co-Director and UW Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Patrice Held, PhD, FACMGG, shares how the newborn screening program developed innovative online training modules that positively impacted the analytical testing process of the newborn screening program.
These learning opportunities for health care providers address timeliness and quality assurance concerns.