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Obama’s HHS shuts down public access to doctor malpractice data

 
 
Reply Wed 14 Sep, 2011 09:28 am
This is a stupid move that weakens protection for people. It was long after a doctor ruined my right leg surgery that I found out that he was a drug addict and a liar, and other doctors knew about him. ---BBB

Sep. 13, 2011 10:15 PM
Obama’s HHS shuts down public access to doctor malpractice data
By ALAN BAVLEY
The Kansas City Star

Doctors with histories of alleged malpractice often go undisciplined

Patient advocacy groups are protesting the government’s shutdown of public access to data on malpractice and disciplinary actions involving thousands of doctors nationwide.

The National Practitioner Data Bank maintains confidential records that state medical boards, hospitals and insurance plans use in granting licenses or staff privileges to doctors.

Although records naming physicians aren’t available to the public, the data bank for many years provided access to its reports with the names of doctors and hospitals and other identifying information removed.

That changed Sept. 1 when the data bank removed these public-use files from its website. The action came shortly after it learned The Kansas City Star planned to use its reports.

The story, about doctors with long histories of alleged malpractice but who have not been disciplined by the Kansas or Missouri medical boards, was published on Sept. 4.

The Star linked anonymous data bank reports to a Johnson County neurosurgeon by matching its information to the contents of court records of malpractice cases. Journalists often use this technique to glean additional information about doctors from the data.

“We’ve seen (The Star’s) reporting and others that show your ability to triangulate on data bank data. We have a responsibility to make sure under federal law that it remains confidential,” said Martin Kramer, spokesman for the Health and Human Services Department’s Health Resources and Services Administration, the agency that oversees the data bank.

Kramer said his agency may make the public-use files available again after a “thorough analysis of the data field.” But that process probably will take at least six months and the files may not return in the same format as they had been.

Previously, the files could be downloaded from the data bank website as massive spreadsheets. Names of doctors were replaced by arbitrarily assigned practitioner numbers.

The ages of doctors and patients, as well as the dollar sums of malpractice payments, were presented as ranges, such as a doctor age 40 to 49, rather than as specific numbers.

The bank is not mandated to make public files immediately accessible on its website, but is required to respond to information requests.

“Whatever they do will probably make it more difficult to use the files in meaningful ways,” said Alan Levine, a health care researcher with Public Citizen’s Health Research Group, which advocates for patient safety

On Tuesday, Public Citizen sent a letter to the Health Resources and Services Administration objecting to the removal of the public-use files.

“The continued availability of this data is crucial to patient safety and research aimed at informed public policy decisions concerning malpractice, tort reform, peer review, and medical licensing. There simply is no substitute for the NPDB Public Use Data File if this vital research is to be continued,” the letter said.

The Association of Health Care Journalists also opposes removal of the files.

“We’re really disturbed by this,” said Charles Ornstein, president of the medical writer group. “We’ve seen our members do terrific work (with the files) that protects the public.”

Ornstein pointed to stories by the Hartford Courant in Connecticut and the Raleigh News & Observer in North Carolina citing the data bank’s public use files as a source on doctors whom they named.

“If it were not for this information used by reporters, their stories would not have been as strong,” he said.

“Why are they picking on this (Star) article?” asked Lisa McGiffert, director of Consumers Union’s Safe Patient Project. Consumers Union, which wants greater public disclosure by the data bank, will be asking the agency to put its files back online, she said.

“This administration (of President Barack Obama) has been touting their position for open government,” she said. “I see this action as totally counter to that.”

Kramer said the data bank was alerted to The Star’s reporting by Robert Tenny, a physician the newspaper was reporting upon. In order to provide Tenny with an opportunity to respond, The Star notified Tenny’s lawyer on Aug. 16 of specific information it intended to publish, including several matters contained in the data bank.

In a letter Aug. 26, the bank’s director Cynthia Grubbs advised The Star that violations of data bank confidentiality provisions are subject to a civil monetary penalties. (Read the letter here.) The Star, however, used only publicly available information from the Data Bank.

“A federal agency should not be intimidating reporters for using information that they put on their own website,” Ornstein said.

But Kramer said his agency must investigate any potential breaches of confidentiality.

“Once we became aware that this information may be made public, we had a responsibility to make sure that it remains confidential,” he said.

Read more: http://www.kansascity.com/2011/09/13/3140759/obamas-hhs-shuts-down-public-access.html#ixzz1XwNJssvM
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Thu 22 Sep, 2011 09:40 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
September 22, 2011
Reopen National Practitioner Data Bank files, groups urge Congress
By Alan Bavley | The Kansas City Star

In a letter to key members of Congress and to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, six prominent journalism organizations are asking that a database containing statistical information on doctors’ malpractice histories be made public again.

The National Practitioner Data Bank took its public use file off its website Sept. 1 after it learned that The Kansas City Star was able to glean information about a Johnson County neurosurgeon from anonymous data in the files. Previously, other newspapers have identified doctors from the public use file without repercussions.

In their letter, released Wednesday, the journalism groups called the public use files “a vital government resource used by reporters and others to expose flawed oversight of doctors around the country.”

“Without stories written by our members, it’s fair to say that some unsafe doctors would continue to be practicing with clean licenses and patient protection legislation in several states likely would not have been enacted,” the letter said.

The National Practitioner Data Bank is an HHS agency that compiles information about malpractice payouts, hospital discipline and regulatory sanctions against doctors and other health professionals. State medical boards, hospitals and insurance plans use this information when assessing applications for licenses or staff privileges.

Only the data bank’s public use file, which removes names and other identifying information, is available to journalists and other members of the public.

The Star used the public use file to investigate how the Kansas and Missouri medical boards discipline doctors with extensive histories of malpractice payouts.

In a story published Sept. 4, The Star reported finding 21 doctors in the two states who had 10 or more payouts, but had not been disciplined.

The Star story also detailed the history of one of the 21 doctors, neurosurgeon Robert Tenny. The newspaper was able to identify Tenny in the data bank by comparing the information to court records.

After being contacted by The Star for comment about lawsuits and information in the data bank, Tenny’s attorney complained to the data bank.

The data bank then sent a letter to The Star notifying it of civil fines that can be imposed for improper use of its confidential information.

The Star, which had used only the data bank’s public use file, did not remove from its story the material about Tenny that it discovered there.

The data bank may make the public use file available again, a spokesman has said. But that process probably will take at least six months and the files may not return in the same format.

The groups calling for restoration of the public use file include the Association of Health Care Journalists, Investigative Reporters & Editors, the National Association of Science Writers, the National Freedom of Information Coalition, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the Society of Professional Journalists.

Consumers Union and Public Citizen’s Health Research Group, which advocate for patient safety, also have asked that the data bank file be made public again.

Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/09/22/124896/reopen-national-practitioner-data.html#ixzz1YhE1SUxq
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Mon 17 Oct, 2011 10:59 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
Oct. 16, 2011
Senator demands that U.S. agency explain shutdown of doctor database
By ALAN BAVLEY - The Kansas City Star

A U.S. senator is demanding that the Department of Health and Human Services explain why it shut down public access to a federal database that contains information on the malpractice and disciplinary histories of thousands of doctors nationwide.

The National Practitioner Data Bank took its public use file off its website Sept. 1 after it learned that The Kansas City Star was able to glean information about a Johnson County neurosurgeon from anonymous data in the files. For many years, other newspapers had similarly identified doctors from the public use file without repercussions.

“Shutting down public access to the data bank undermines the critical mission of identifying inefficiencies within our health care system,” Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa said in a letter to Mary Wakefield, administrator of the HHS agency that oversees the data bank.

“More transparency serves the public interest,” wrote Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee.

An HHS spokesman had no comment on Grassley’s letter. However, a Judiciary Committee staff member confirmed the agency met an Oct. 11 deadline that Grassley set for contacting the committee to arrange a briefing on the database shutdown.

Grassley also gave the agency until Oct. 21 to answer several specific questions about its action.

The data bank’s action has created a storm of protest by journalists, academic researchers and patient safety advocates who consider the public file valuable for uncovering deficiencies in the way doctors are regulated.

Six journalism organizations and 23 faculty members from universities nationwide have called on Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to restore full public access to the database.

Recently, the data bank said that researchers could request specific public data but that the agency retained the option to deny it. Previously, the full public use file could be downloaded directly from the data bank’s website.

The data bank compiles information about malpractice payouts, hospital discipline and regulatory sanctions against doctors and other health professionals. State medical boards, hospitals and insurance plans use this information when assessing applications for licenses or staff privileges.

Only the data bank’s public use file, which removes names and other identifying information, had been available to the public.

The Star used the public file to investigate how the Kansas and Missouri medical boards discipline doctors with extensive histories of malpractice payouts.

In a story published Sept. 4, The Star reported finding 21 doctors in the two states who had 10 or more payouts but had not been disciplined.

The Star’s story also detailed the history of one of the 21 doctors, neurosurgeon Robert Tenny. The newspaper was able to identify Tenny in the data bank by comparing the information to court records.

Read more: http://www.kansascity.com/2011/10/16/3211703/senator-demands-that-us-agency.html#ixzz1b3hlfpXN
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