The Metropolitan Atlanta Congenital Defects Program (MACDP)
The Metropolitan Atlanta Congenital Defects Program (MACDP) is a population-based tracking system for birth defects, including spina bifida, among children born to residents of metropolitan Atlanta. Established in 1967, MACDP is the nation’s first population-based system to actively track birth defects. A population-based tracking program allows researchers to look at all of the people with a certain condition (like spina bifida) who live in a specific area. This is done so that researchers can get a complete picture of what is happening within the population.
[Read more about MACDP]
State-Based Tracking Systems
Forty-one states have some level of birth defects tracking programs. CDC funds 14 states to track major birth defects, including spina bifida, using population-based methods. State systems use the data to help direct birth defects prevention activities and refer children affected by birth defects to needed services.
[Read about the work taking place in each state]
National Birth Defects Prevention Network (NBDPN)
CDC supports and collaborates with the NBDPN. The NBDPN is a group of over 225 individuals working at the national, state, and local levels, who are involved in tracking, researching, and preventing birth defects. The NBDPN serves as a forum for exchanging ideas about tracking and researching birth defects and for providing technical support for state and local programs. Established in 1997, the NBDPN assesses the effect of birth defects on children, families, and the healthcare system. The network also identifies risk factors for birth defects. This information can be used to develop strategies to prevent birth defects and to assist families and their providers in preventing other disabilities in children with birth defects.
[Learn more about NBDPN]
International Clearinghouse for Birth Defects Surveillance and Research (ICBDSR)
The ICBDSR brings together birth defects programs from around the world with the aim of conducting worldwide tracking and research to prevent birth defects and to improve the lives of people born with these conditions. CDC supports and collaborates with the ICBDSR as a way to gain knowledge and expertise on birth defects globally and to further our domestic goals and those of the international community.
[Learn more about ICBDSR]
Environmental Public Health Tracking (EPHT)
Environmental public health tracking is the ongoing collection, integration, analysis, interpretation, and dissemination of data on environmental hazards, exposures to those hazards, and health effects that may be related to the exposures.
CDC funds 24 state and local health departments to develop local tracking networks and to provide data to the CDC’s Tracking Network. Data given to CDC include 12 birth defects. The Tracking Network provides the prevalence of these defects and publishes updated data tables every year. Currently, CDC’s Tracking Network has birth defects data for California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York State, New York City , Utah, Vermont, and Wisconsin.
[Read about birth defects and the environment]