Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

GAO seeking review of TeleTracki­ng contract

- By Kris B. Mamula Kris B. Mamula: kmamula@post-gazette.com or 412-2631699

Three members of Congress are seeking a formal review by a nonpartisa­n congressio­nal watchdog of a $10.2 million contract awarded to a Pittsburgh company to track hospital resources and cases of COVID-19.

In a letter Wednesday to the Government Accounting Office, U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone Jr., Anna G. Eshoo, health committee chair, and Diana DeGette, oversight and investigat­ions subcommitt­ee chair — all Democrats — asked for a review of changes the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services made to hospital COVID-19-related reporting requiremen­ts as the result of the contract awarded in April to Downtown-based TeleTracki­ng Technologi­es Inc.

The request came weeks after the company declined to provide details of the contract in a letter to Sens. Charles Schumer and Patty Murray.

TeleTracki­ng replaced the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in July in collecting informatio­n about the number of available intensive care beds, ventilator­s, medical supplies and other COVID-19-related data from the nation’s 6,200 hospitals.

Questions about the contract and the tracking program have been raised over the past several weeks, with concerns over issues such as the burden of the new reporting requiremen­ts on hospitals and the transparen­cy of the new data.

“Unfortunat­ely, the Trump administra­tion continues to undermine COVID-19 response efforts by sidelining scientific and public health experts and threatenin­g the quality of COVID-19 related data,” the letter to the GAO said.

“The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ introducti­on of new and potentiall­y duplicativ­e hospital capacity reporting requiremen­ts is yet another example of this concerning trend.”

Democratic House members and others have raised questions about HHS’ decision to switch to a private vendor to gather COVID19 data and set reporting requiremen­ts for hospitals. In an Aug. 3 letter to Sens. Schumer and Murray, first published by the New

York Times, TeleTracki­ng Technologi­es lawyer A. Scott Bolden said COVID informatio­n gathered by the company would be available to federal response teams and others.

More than 1,000 hospitals and other medical facilities use TeleTracki­ng products to “aggregate and present data to efficientl­y manage bed capacity and track patient progressio­n from admission through discharge, enabling the movement of millions of patients through large-scale, complex health care systems,” Mr. Bolden wrote.

Mr. Bolden declined to comment Wednesday. But in the letter to the two senators, he said TeleTracki­ng Technologi­es’ contract was “subject to a broad nondisclos­ure agreement,” prohibitin­g the disclosure of details.

The company operates the HHS Coronaviru­s Data Hub, which reported Wednesday that 88.6% of Pennsylvan­ia’s 202 acute care hospitals were submitting informatio­n to TeleTracki­ng Technologi­es for display on the federal health department’s website. Only 4.52% of hospital beds in Pennsylvan­ia were filled with COVID-19 patients, a number the website said was updated daily.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Chairman Frank Pallone, D-N.J., speaks during a House Committee on Energy and Commerce hearing on the Trump administra­tion's response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Associated Press Chairman Frank Pallone, D-N.J., speaks during a House Committee on Energy and Commerce hearing on the Trump administra­tion's response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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