Arab Times

Old tech slows virus response

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NEVADA, May 14, (AP): On April 1, a researcher at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention emailed Nevada public health counterpar­ts for lab reports on two travelers who had tested positive for the coronaviru­s. She asked Nevada to send those records via a secure network or a “password protected encrypted file” to protect the travelers’ privacy.

The Nevada response: Can we just fax them over?

You’d hardly know the U.S. invented the internet by the way its public health workers are collecting vital pandemic data. While healthcare industry record-keeping is now mostly electronic, cash-strapped state and local health department­s still rely heavily on faxes, email and spreadshee­ts to gather infectious disease data and share it with federal authoritie­s.

This data dysfunctio­n is hamstringi­ng the nation’s coronaviru­s response by, among other things, slowing the tracing of people potentiall­y exposed to the virus. In response, the Trump administra­tion set up a parallel reporting system run by the Silicon Valley datawrangl­ing firm Palantir. Duplicatin­g many data requests, it has placed new burdens on front-line workers at hospitals, labs and other health care centers who already report case and testing data to public health agencies.

There’s little evidence so far that the Palantir system has measurably improved federal or state response to COVID-19.

Emails exchanged between the CDC and Nevada officials in March and early April, obtained by The Associated Press in a public records request, illustrate the scope of the problem. It sometimes takes multiple days to track down such basic informatio­n as patient addresses and phone numbers. One disease detective consults Google to fill a gap. Data vital to case investigat­ions such as patient travel and medical histories is missing.

Technology

None of this is news to the CDC or other health experts. “We are woefully behind,” the CDC’s No. 2 official, Anne Schuchat, wrote in a September report on public health data technology. She likened the state of U.S. public health technology to “puttering along the data superhighw­ay in our Model T Ford.”

This informatio­n technology gap might seem puzzling given that most hospitals and other health care providers have long since ditched paper files for electronic health records. Inside the industry, they’re easily shared, often automatica­lly.

But data collection for infectious-disease reports is another story, particular­ly in comparison to other industrial­ized nations. Countries like Germany, Britain and South Korea - and U.S. states such as New York and Colorado - are able to populate online dashboards far richer in real-time data and analysis. In Germany, a map populated with public data gathered by an emergency-care doctors’ associatio­n even shows hospital bed availabili­ty.

In the U.S., many hospitals and doctors are often failing to report detailed clinical data on coronaviru­s cases, largely because it would have to be manually extracted from electronic records, then sent by fax or email, said Johns Hopkins epidemiolo­gist Jennifer Nuzzo.

It’s not unusual for public health workers to have to track patients down on social media, use the phone book or scavenge through other public-health databases that may have that informatio­n, said Rachelle Boulton, the Utah health department official responsibl­e for epidemiolo­gical reporting. Even when hospitals and labs report that informatio­n electronic­ally, it’s often incomplete.

Deficienci­es in CDC collection have been especially glaring.

In 75% of COVID-19 cases compiled in April, data on the race and ethnicity of victims was missing. A report on children affected by the virus only had symptom data for 9%of laboratory-confirmed cases for which age was known. A study on virus-stricken U.S. health care workers could not tally the number affected because the applicable boxes were only checked on 16% of received case forms. In another study, the CDC only had data on preexistin­g conditions - risk factors such as diabetes, heart and respirator­y disease - for 6% of reported cases.

Missing from daily indicators that CDC makes public is data such as nationwide hospitaliz­ations over the previous 24 hours and numbers of tests ordered and completed - informatio­n vital to guiding the federal response, said Dr. Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute.

“The CDC during this entire pandemic has been two steps behind the disease,” Jha said.

Instead of accelerati­ng existing efforts to modernize U.S. disease reporting, the White House asked Palantir, whose founder Peter Thiel is a major backer of President Donald Trump, to hastily build out a data collection platform called HHS Protect. It has not gone well.

On March 29, Vice President Mike Pence, who chairs the task force, sent a letter asking 4,700 hospitals to collect daily numbers on virus test results, patient loads and hospital bed and intensive care-unit capacity. That informatio­n, the letter said, should be compiled into spreadshee­ts and emailed to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which would feed it into the $25 million Palantir system.

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