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Newborn Screening: A Lifesaving Start for Every Child
Newborn screening has become one of the most impactful public health practices of the modern era, offering babies a safer and healthier beginning to life. Performed within the first 24 to 48 hours after birth, this screening process helps identify certain genetic, metabolic, and hormonal disorders that may not be visible immediately but can lead to severe complications if left undetected. What makes newborn screening remarkable is that it quietly saves thousands of lives each year through early detection and simple interventions that can change a child’s lifelong health trajectory.
The process is straightforward yet powerful. A few drops of blood are collected from the infant’s heel, commonly called the “heel-prick test.” This tiny sample is then analyzed for a list of conditions—ranging from metabolic disorders such as phenylketonuria (PKU), to endocrine conditions like congenital hypothyroidism, and even rare genetic diseases. In…