N.Y. Public Health Law § 2500-A
* (a) It shall be the duty of the administrative officer or other person in charge of each institution caring for infants twenty-eight days or less of age and the person required in pursuance of the provisions of section forty-one hundred thirty of this chapter to register the birth of a child, to cause to have administered to every such infant or child in its or his care a test for phenylketonuria, homozygous sickle cell disease, hypothyroidism, branched-chain ketonuria, galactosemia, homocystinuria, critical congenital heart defects through pulse oximetry screening, and such other diseases and conditions as may from time to time be designated by the commissioner in accordance with rules or regulations prescribed by the commissioner. Testing, the recording of the results of such tests, tracking, follow-up reviews and educational activities shall be performed at such times and in such manner as may be prescribed by the commissioner. The commissioner shall promulgate regulations setting forth the manner in which information describing the purposes of the requirements of this section shall be disseminated to parents or a guardian of the infant tested. * NB Effective until January 30, 2019 * (a) 1. It shall be the duty of the administrative officer or other person in charge of each institution caring for infants twenty-eight days or less of age and the person required in pursuance of the provisions of section forty-one hundred thirty of this chapter to register the birth of a child, to cause to have administered to every such infant or child in its or his care a test for: i. phenylketonuria, ii. homozygous sickle cell disease, iii. hypothyroidism, iv. branched-chain ketonuria, v. galactosemia, vi. homocystinuria, vii. critical congenital heart defects through pulse oximetry screening, viii. with regard to any newborn infant who is identified as, or suspected of, having a hearing impairment as a result of a screening conducted pursuant to section twenty-five hundred-g of this title, cause to be administered to such infant a urine polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test for cytomegalovirus, unless the parent of the infant objects thereto; provided that if the commissioner determines that another test for cytomegalovirus is diagnostically equivalent to or better than the urine polymerase chain reaction test, the commissioner may, by regulation under this section, allow or require the use of that other test, and ix. such other diseases and conditions as may from time to time be designated by the commissioner in accordance with rules or regulations prescribed by the commissioner.