Texarkana Gazette

Louisiana: Some parishes misusing virus data lists

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BATON ROUGE, La. — The Louisiana Department of Health is accusing some rural parish officials of misusing lists of patients who tested positive for the coronaviru­s, violating privacy laws and misinterpr­eting the data to claim the virus outbreak is less severe than it is.

To combat what it considers improper handling of sensitive data, the health department sent an email to all parish emergency leaders Thursday telling them if they want to keep receiving the reports, they must sign a new data sharing agreement limiting how they can use the data and requiring destructio­n of earlier records.

“The problem we had is when we did share it, we told them, ‘This is (federally protected) informatio­n. You’re not to share it with everyone.’ They have not always followed our guidance,” said Dr. Jimmy Guidry,

Louisiana’s state health office. “They have shared and put informatio­n out and put names out, and that changes the way people react to you, at your home, in your community.”

The health department sends lists of patients who tested positive for the coronaviru­s to local emergency officials to help first responders know when to prepare for interactin­g with someone infected.

But the Advocate reports that in some rural parishes, emergency officials combed through the names, noticed duplicates and shared the lists with other elected officials. Several claimed it was evidence Gov. John Bel Edwards’ administra­tion is inflating the number of cases because their list didn’t match up with the official tally of cases.

“It’s funny to me that if they’re not misreprese­nting then why did they all of the sudden quit sending out these reports?” said Shawn Beard, the Red

River Parish police jury president. “They want to shut us up,” he said. The Department of Health has spent weeks rebuffing claims from local officials, particular­ly from Red River Parish, that the lists prove the state is inflating numbers. State officials say they scrub the data regularly to remove duplicate names so people who are tested multiple times don’t inadverten­tly inflate the case count.

Beard — who declared masks don’t work to stop coronaviru­s spread and expressed skepticism about hospitals being overrun with patients — said the lists sent to parishes include multiple instances of the same person.

But health department data indicates there are far more positive tests than cases. Recent figures on testing, which run through July 22, showed Louisiana had received 151,740 total positive tests that resulted in only 107,394 cases, meaning the state removed more than 44,000 duplicates.

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