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Every year approximately 1000 American children are born with treatable, detectable metabolic disorders. Thanks to newborn screening tests, many are diagnosed and treated quickly, and go on to lead fulfilling lives. Tragically, many other children never get the proper blood screening tests, and they can be killed or permanently crippled by disease before the first symptoms become apparent.
Firm attorney Chuck Hehmeyer has devoted much of his legal career
to aiding the families of children with metabolic disorders, including
PKU (phenyketonuria), GA-1 (Glutaric Acidemian Type I), MCAD (Medium
Chain Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency), IVA (Isovaleric Acidemia),
Galactosemia, MSUD (Maple Syrup Urine Disease), Homocystinuria,
CAH (Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia), Biotinidase Deficiency, and
PA (Proprionic Acidemia). One of Mr. Hehmeyer's first encounters
with metabolic disorders was when he was called on to defend an
Amish family wrongly accused of murdering their daughter. While
the charges were pending, the parents lost custody of all of their
children. The family's doctor thought that the little girl might
have died from a metabolic disorder. The doctor and the family asked
Mr. Hehmeyer to get involved. Investigation revealed that the girl
had a bleeding disorder that had gone undetected and untreated because
a midwife failed to give her a vitamin K injection at birth. The
parents were exonerated and reunited with their surviving children.
Mr. Hehmeyer now has a national reputation in this area; he represents children with metabolic disorders in California, Texas, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and everywhere in between. Mr. Hehmeyer speaks regularly to support groups, medical groups, and lawyers about this unique group of diseases. He has published extensively, trying to ensure that his expertise will no longer be needed.
An impassioned advocate for children and their families, Mr. Hehmeyer
also works to change hospital practices. For instance, shortly after
Mr. Hehmeyer filed suit against a Delaware Valley hospital for failing
to screen a newborn child who had a readily treatable metabolic
disorder, the hospital announced that it would change its practices.
Click here to read
more about the case. Shortly thereafter, all Philadelphia area
hospitals changed their policies to include screening.
More about Newborn Metabolic Disorders:
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