About PHL: 2023 Annual Report
The Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) Public Health Laboratory provides many services that help keep Minnesotans safe. Each section of the lab plays a different role in protecting the public’s health by working together with partners at the local, state, and national levels.
Ready to Respond to Emergencies
The Public Health Laboratory responds to emergencies that involve potential chemical, biological, or radiological agents that threaten the health of Minnesotans. The laboratory performs analytical testing as needed and provide training to sentinel laboratories—clinical laboratories on the front lines of disease detection—and first responders across the state. MDH’s Public Health Laboratory plays a role in multiple national laboratory networks, including the Laboratory Response Network (LRN), sharing testing capabilities and providing increased capacity for emergencies that occur in Minnesota and elsewhere in the United States.
Helping Babies Start Life Healthy
The Newborn Screening program screens infants for over 60 rare, serious, and hidden disorders, including hearing loss and critical congenital heart disease (CCHD). If left untreated, these disorders can lead to illness, physical disability, developmental delay, or death. Newborn screening aims to identify disorders before symptoms appear so affected infants can receive prompt diagnosis and treatment. Together with Minnesota’s medical professionals, nearly 63,000 babies are screened each year.
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Protecting Your Community From Environmental Health Hazards
The Environmental Laboratory performs chemical, bacteriological, and radiological testing of environmental samples for pollutants that may affect the health of Minnesotans. These samples include water, air, soil, and hazardous waste. The Environmental Lab also uses biomonitoring -- identifying and measuring potentially toxic chemicals in the body -- to help determine populations at risk for exposure to environmental hazards. Working with partners around the state, the lab tests well water for contamination after floods, performs routine monitoring of the environment and drinking water facilities, prepares to respond to radiologic emergencies, and supports public health biosurveillance activities.
Related stories:
- Testing Minnesota Children for Harmful Chemicals
- PFAS: First New Drinking Water Contaminant Since 1996
- Testing Reveals Which Drugs Are Involved in Overdoses
Keeping You Healthy by Detecting Outbreaks and Emerging Infectious Diseases
The Infectious Disease Laboratory works to identify changes in known pathogens, detect emerging diseases, and identify sources of disease outbreaks in Minnesota and nationwide. The quick results provided are critical to identifying outbreaks before they spread. The lab tests for a wide variety of diseases, including influenza, rabies, tuberculosis, meningitis, and many different illnesses caused by contaminated food and water.
The Infectious Disease Laboratory staff members played a critical role during the COVID-19 pandemic. The lab was the first place in Minnesota to perform testing for the virus that causes COVID-19, processing hundreds of thousands of samples, and led the nation in whole genome sequencing to identify new SARS-CoV-2 variants.
Related stories:
- Wastewater Testing Helps Fight COVID-19, Other Infectious Disease
- New Antimicrobial-Resistant Organisms Threaten Public Health
- Mpox, Ebola Threats Rise and Fall
Department-Wide Stories:
At a Glance:
- 350 Minnesota newborns identified with a disorder through Newborn Screening
- 116,229 environmental & biomonitoring tests performed to identify toxic chemicals
- 86,110 tests performed to identify infectious disease trends and outbreaks
- 56 rare, highly infectious bacteria identified which prompted early treatment
PHL Staff by Section:
- 10 Director's Office staff
- 42 Newborn Screening staff
- 54 Environmental Laboratory staff
- 62 Infectious Disease Laboratory staff
Return to the main 2023 Annual Report page.