Santa Fe New Mexican

◆ Trump administra­tion asserts control over virus data.

- By Sheryl Gay Stolberg

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion has ordered hospitals to bypass the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and send all coronaviru­s patient informatio­n to a central database in Washington beginning Wednesday. The move has alarmed health experts who fear the data will be politicize­d or withheld from the public.

The new instructio­ns were posted in a little-noticed document on the Department of Health and Human Services website. From now on, the department — not the CDC — will collect daily reports about the patients that each hospital is treating, the number of available beds and ventilator­s, and other informatio­n vital to tracking the pandemic.

Officials say the change will streamline data gathering and assist the White House coronaviru­s task force in allocating scarce supplies like personal protective gear and remdesivir, the first drug shown to be effective against the virus. But the Health and Human Services database that will receive new informatio­n is not open to the public, which could affect the work of scores of researcher­s, modelers and health officials who rely on CDC data to make projection­s and crucial decisions.

“Historical­ly, CDC has been the place where public health data has been sent, and this raises questions about not just access for researcher­s but access for reporters, access for the public to try to better understand what is happening with the outbreak,” said Jen Kates, the director of global health and HIV policy with the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

“How will the data be protected?” she asked. “Will there be transparen­cy, will there be access, and what is the role of the CDC in understand­ing the data?”

News of the change came as a shock at the CDC, according to two officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter. Michael R. Caputo, a Health and Human Services spokesman, called the CDC’s system inadequate and said the two systems would be linked. The CDC would continue to make data public, he said.

“Today, the CDC still has at least a week lag in reporting hospital data,” Caputo said. “America requires it in real time. The new, faster and complete data system is what our nation needs to defeat the coronaviru­s, and the CDC, an operating division of HHS, will certainly participat­e in this streamline­d all-of-government response. They will simply no longer control it.”

But the instructio­ns to hospitals in the department guidance is explicit and underscore­d: “As of July 15, 2020, hospitals should no longer report the COVID19 informatio­n in this document to the National Healthcare Safety Network site,” the CDC’s system for gathering data from more than 25,000 medical centers around the country.

Public health experts have long expressed concerns that the Trump administra­tion is politicizi­ng science and underminin­g its health experts, in particular the CDC; four of the agency’s former directors, spanning both Republican and Democratic administra­tions, said as much in an opinion piece published Tuesday in the Washington Post. The data collection shift reinforced those fears.

“Centralizi­ng control of all data under the umbrella of an inherently political apparatus is dangerous and breeds distrust,” said Dr. Nicole Lurie, who served as assistant secretary for preparedne­ss and response under former President Barack Obama. “It appears to cut off the ability of agencies like CDC to do its basic job.”

The shift grew out of a tense conference call several weeks ago between hospital executives and Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White House coronaviru­s response coordinato­r. After Birx said hospitals were not adequately reporting their data, she convened a working group of government and hospital officials who devised the new plan, according to Dr. Janis Orlowski, the chief health care officer of the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges, who participat­ed in the group’s meetings.

The change exposes the vast gaps in the government’s ability to collect and manage health data — an antiquated system at best, experts say. The CDC has been collecting coronaviru­s data through its National Healthcare Safety Network, which was expanded at the outset of the pandemic to track hospital capacity and patient informatio­n specific to COVID-19.

In its new guidance, Health and Human Services said that going forward, hospitals should report detailed informatio­n on a daily basis directly to the new centralize­d system, which is managed by TeleTracki­ng, a health data firm with headquarte­rs in Pittsburgh. However, if hospitals were already reporting such informatio­n to their states, they could continue to do so if they received a written release saying the state would handle reporting.

Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the top Democrat on the Senate Health Committee, has raised questions about the TeleTracki­ng contract, calling it a “noncompeti­tive, multimilli­on-dollar contract” for a “duplicativ­e health data system.”

Rep. Donna E. Shalala, D-Fla., who served as health secretary under President Bill Clinton, said the CDC was the proper agency to gather health data. If there were flaws in the CDC’s systems, she said, they should be fixed.

“Only the CDC has the expertise to collect data,” Shalala said. “I think any move to take responsibi­lity away from the people who have the expertise is politicizi­ng.”

Hospitals say the previous reporting requiremen­ts were cumbersome, partly because they frequently changed.

“It has been an administra­tive hassle and confusing to constantly be shifting gears on reporting while hospitals are on the front lines during a pandemic,” Carrie Williams, a spokeswoma­n for the Texas Hospital Associatio­n, wrote in an email.

At Rush University Medical Center in Chicago as the pandemic raged, the hospital had four full-time employees reporting coronaviru­s data to four different agencies, said Dr. Bala N. Hota, the hospital’s chief analytics officer. Rush collected more than 100 different measures, some of which determined how much money it would receive under different federal programs.

But while Hota said he supported streamlini­ng the process and the involvemen­t of state and local agencies in reporting, he was also concerned that months into the pandemic, the United States still did not have an establishe­d system of collecting the kind of informatio­n it needed to seamlessly move patients from a full hospital to one with available beds.

“The CDC is the right agency to be at the forefront of collecting the data,” Hota said.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF
NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? A scientist last month prepares samples to be tested for COVID-19 at Houston Methodist Hospital. Hospitals have been ordered to bypass the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and send all patient informatio­n to a central database in Washington, raising questions about transparen­cy.
ERIN SCHAFF NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO A scientist last month prepares samples to be tested for COVID-19 at Houston Methodist Hospital. Hospitals have been ordered to bypass the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and send all patient informatio­n to a central database in Washington, raising questions about transparen­cy.

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