DETROIT—A judge has found key parts of Michigan’s newborn blood-testing program unconstitutional in a challenge by four parents who raised concerns about how leftover samples are used long after screening for rare diseases.
The lawsuit is not a class action. But the decision is likely to have an impact on how the state maintains millions of dried blood spots and makes them available for outside research.
Research with newborn blood spots occurs in other states, too.
“Michigan undoubtedly has some level of interest in detecting rare blood diseases in its infant population,” U.S. District Judge Thomas Ludington said. “But … defendants’ post-testing conduct is not necessary to effectuate that interest because ‘the health of the child is no longer at stake.’”…