MICHIGAN5 workers at wildlife disease lab get latent form of TBPublished:
Monday, March 9, 2020

Five people who worked in a Michigan wildlife disease lab have been
diagnosed with a latent form of tuberculosis, a spokesman said Friday.

The Department of Natural Resources' lab processes thousands of deer heads
during the annual hunting season to check for chronic wasting disease and
bovine TB.

TB is an illness caused by bacteria that attack the lungs. It can be fatal,
although a latent form shows no symptoms, doesn't make people feel sick and
is not contagious, according to federal health experts. It typically
involves treatment to prevent full-blown TB.

The DNR learned about the infections last year, including three people in
June and two later in the summer, spokesman Ed Golder said.

"It was discovered through routine testing we do with people who work in
the wildlife disease lab," Golder told the Associated Press.

The story first was reported
<https://www.bridgemi.com/michigan-environment-watch/five-michigan-dnr-workers-contracted-tuberculosis-likely-testing-deer>
 online by *Bridge Magazine*, a news organization.

Golder said it was the department's "working assumption" that the workers
got TB from infected deer "but we can't say for sure."

The lab is located at Michigan State University. Golder said the DNR found
no mistakes with the proper use of personal protection but subsequently
made respirators mandatory during necropsies of all animals.

The lab in 2019 also reduced the number of deer tested each day and limited
the hours that staff can work on the necropsy floor, Golder said.

"There is no way to pinpoint exactly when or how the exposure occurred. The
Lab has been following proven protocols for 25 years without a single
documented exposure until now," lab supervisor Kelly Straka and wildlife
division chief Russ Mason said in a July email to employees.

The state agency informed Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's office and
roughly 200 employees, but it didn't publicly announce the TB cases last
year. Health consultants had advised that "there wasn't a broader public
health concern," Golder said.

He said the department also wanted to protect the privacy of affected
employees.

Terry Minzey, a DNR wildlife supervisor in the Upper Peninsula, was scolded
by his bosses for disclosing the news in August to a hunter group. He
objected and said the majority of his comments came from the July email
sent to staff. *— Ed White, Associated Press*
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