New York Post

Andrew Cuomo 2.0?

Team Hochul still hiding nursing-home data

- BILL HAMMOND Bill Hammond is senior fellow for health policy at the Empire Center.

DESPITE Gov. Kathy Hochul’s promises of transparen­cy, the state Health Department continues responding to requests for pandemic data with stalling tactics that became notorious during the Cuomo administra­tion.

In one striking example, the department recently responded to the Empire Center’s request for updated nursing-home fatality data with the same form letter — and the same invalid excuse for delay — that it used last year as part of what came to be recognized as a coverup.

In its letter of Sept. 22, 2021, the department said it couldn’t produce the data until Nov. 29 — five months after the original request — “because a diligent search for responsive records is still being conducted.”

That’s exactly the same boilerplat­e explanatio­n that it gave for withholdin­g nursing-home data from the Empire Center in August 2020, and the claim was specious in both cases.

In reality, the requested records were readily findable in the department’s Health Emergency Response Data System, or HERDS, which has been collecting daily reports from nursing homes since early in the pandemic.

The unwarrante­d delay on nursing-home data is part of a pattern in how the department handles requests under the Freedom of Informatio­n Law. Of the 62 requests for pandemic data filed four months ago by the Empire Center, the deto partment has completely fulfilled nine, four partly fulfilled and denied nine outright.

It has postponed the other 40, including the request for nursinghom­e death data, indefinite­ly. In all but a few of those cases, it claims to be conducting a “diligent search” for records.

Last week, the Empire Center formally appealed 32 of those postponeme­nts on grounds that the delays were unreasonab­le and that the department failed to commit to a hard deadline as required by law.

In its appeals related to longterm care deaths, the center also cited the outcome of its lawsuit last year – which resulted in a court ruling that the department had violated FOIL and an order to promptly turn over the requested data.

The department has 10 business days to respond to the appeals.

In case it needs to be said, last year’s stonewalli­ng did not end well. The Cuomo administra­tion was eventually forced to admit that the full toll among long-term care residents — including those who died after being transferre­d to hospitals — was almost 6,000 higher than previously known, an increase of about 50 percent.

The ensuing scandal made national headlines and contribute­d the political demise of former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who resigned in August.

Once the Empire Center obtained detailed records — including the dates and locations of deaths — it found a statistica­l correlatio­n between a Cuomo administra­tion policy directing homes to admit COVID-positive patients during the first wave and higher death rates in facilities that complied.

Last Tuesday, Hochul unveiled a reorganize­d and upgraded COVID tracker Web site that she described as “yet another step we are taking towards more transparen­cy.”

Among other positive steps, the state is posting more data in tabular, downloadab­le format.

One of newly posted data sets gives the death tolls in nursing homes, assisted-living and other adult-care facilities, which is an improvemen­t over the PDF files the state had posted before.

But the data set gives only cumulative totals as of Oct. 18, 2021 — without the date-specific informatio­n that would make it possible to track trends, pinpoint outbreaks or assess policy decisions.

Meanwhile, the Health Department under Hochul’s management is withholdin­g those important details in exactly the same discredite­d manner as it did under her scandal-scarred predecesso­r.

If Hochul wants her administra­tion to be truly transparen­t, she has a long way yet to go.

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