Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Pa. House OKs bill to make more data publicly available

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » A proposal to expand public access to reports about COVID-19 and other diseases passed the Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives on Monday after Republican­s argued it would help people decide how to react to pandemics and other outbreaks.

The House voted on party lines, 113-87, to amend the Disease Prevention and Control Law, supplantin­g an existing section on the confidenti­ality of reports and records with direction that any records “maintained as a result of any action taken in consequenc­e of such reports or any other records maintained” under the law would instead be subject to the Right-to-Know Law.

Supporters said some informatio­n about the current pandemic has been difficult to obtain and that privacy protection­s in state and federal law would limit disclosure to aggregate data that cannot be linked to an individual.

The bill, argued Speaker Bryan Cutler, R-Lancaster, “would allow us as consumers, as residents, us as patients, to have access to good data so we can make good decisions.” He says the sort of data the bill might produce includes vaccinatio­n and infection rates by school district.

Gov. Tom Wolf’s press secretary, Lyndsay Kensinger, said the Democratic administra­tion opposes the bill, noting the legislatio­n does not expressly limit the release of personal medical informatio­n to aggregate data.

“In its current form it allows for the public release of personally identifiab­le medical records and would make public every report of disease,” Kensinger said in an email.

She said the Health Department currently may not disclose disease informatio­n about individual­s, privacy protection­s in the Disease Prevention and Control Law that would end under the legislativ­e proposal.

“Sadly, this is yet another political attack on public health, thinly veiled as a transparen­cy effort when our mutual focus should be on improving our vaccinatio­n rate in all parts of Pennsylvan­ia,” Kensinger said.

Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta, D-Philadelph­ia, said during floor debate it was not clear what the legislatio­n would actually do if it is ever enacted.

“I don’t have confidence or comfort moving forward with this without more conversati­on about what this does,” Kenyatta said.

Rep. Dan Frankel, D-Allegheny, said the legislatio­n could invite trouble, given modern connectivi­ty, hackers and data breaches.

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