Exclusive-U.S. seeks to expand Trump-era COVID data collection under CDC
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[March 14, 2022]
By Julie Steenhuysen and Marisa Taylor
(Reuters) - The Biden administration wants
to expand a federal COVID-19 tracking system created during the pandemic
to provide a more detailed view of how respiratory and other infectious
diseases are affecting patients and hospital resources, according to a
draft of proposed rules reviewed by Reuters.
The plan would build upon a hospital data collection system designed by
the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under the Trump
administration. Management of the program was transferred last month to
HHS's lead public health agency, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC).
The change comes amid criticism over the CDC's shifting public health
guidance during the pandemic and its ability to collect and analyze
COVID data in a timely and transparent way.
Authorization for the current hospital data tracking program is due to
expire once the government lifts the national state of pandemic
emergency.
The proposed plan would ensure it remains in place long term and add new
requirements of the nearly 6,200 participating hospitals, such as
providing data on the number of patients with flu-like illnesses and
other diseases with pandemic potential in addition to COVID and
influenza.
Such reporting would be a condition of hospitals' participation in the
federal Medicare and Medicaid health insurance programs for older and
poor Americans.
The hospitals would be required to provide data - without names - on
patients' vaccination status, pre-existing conditions, age, ethnicity
and other details that would shed light on health outcomes among various
populations.
Beth Blauer, who runs the Pandemic Data Initiative at Johns Hopkins
University, called the proposed plan a "big shift" and "a reconstitution
of trust in the CDC."
"There's concern that when the pandemic emergency lifts, the data flow
will dry up," she said. "This is what they (CDC) were designed to do."
The rules are being reviewed by the White House Office of Management and
Budget, which is expected to publish them to allow for public comment
before they are finalized. CDC officials declined to comment on the
proposed data expansion.
However, the proposed changes have raised concerns among some
administration officials.
"There are just no signs that any thought has been put into how the CDC
can raise its game enough to allow for real-time sharing of information
that informs the public beyond just the federal government," said a
senior Biden administration official familiar with the debate over the
proposal who was not authorized to speak about it.
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A large vaccination site is shown as people with preexisting health
conditions are granted access to a vaccination during the outbreak
of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Inglewood, California,
U.S., March 15, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
The CDC said in a statement the
agency is continuing to partner with HHS "to ensure the data are
available and accessible."
HIGH-PROFILE SETBACKS
The HHS Protect system was created in 2020 under Dr. Deborah Birx,
the coronavirus task force coordinator for the Trump White House, at
a cost of tens of millions of dollars. It quickly became an
effective clearinghouse for daily hospital data on coronavirus
infections and deaths.
At the time, CDC officials conceded that the agency could not
rapidly adapt its National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
reporting system to collect additional hospital and medical
inventory data needed to inform pandemic decision-making. As a
result, CDC recommended HHS develop a new system for this purpose,
according to documents reviewed by Reuters.
The CDC said the decision was based on the lengthy regulatory review
that would have been required to change its own reporting system,
among other factors.
"By no means was this an acknowledgement of the inadequacy of NHSN,"
Sherri Berger, CDC chief of staff, said in an email.
More recently, the CDC has had several high-profile setbacks on its
data reporting, including overestimating the benefit of COVID
booster shots for younger people and failing to track and publish
data on breakthrough infections among the vaccinated in a timely
way.
Blauer and other experts said the CDC was the appropriate agency to
oversee the data program. Some noted that it has received an
additional $500 million in funds under the American Rescue Plan to
further modernize its data collection.
"What we really need to do," said Dr. Celine Gounder, a member of
the Biden Administration's transition team, "is hold them
accountable for following through on that."
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago and Marisa Taylor in
Washington; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Bill Berkrot)
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