WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley is continuing his effort to  restore public access to data on malpractice payouts, hospital  discipline and regulatory sanctions against doctors and other health  professionals and to hold accountable the federal government official  who shut down access to this information.
In a letter sent to the Secretary of Health and Human Services,  Grassley said the department's response to his inquiry of October 7 was  incomplete even while revealing that the Health Research and Services  Administration (HRSA) prematurely jumped to conclusions regarding a  reporter who used publicly available information to track down the  identity of a doctor with a record of malpractice cases.  Grassley said that in  doing so, the federal government undermined its own mandate to "enhance  the quality of healthcare, encourage greater efforts in professional  peer review and restrict the ability of incompetent healthcare  practitioners to relocate without discovery of previous substandard  performance or unprofessional conduct."  Instead, Grassley said it looks  like HRSA was trying to protect a single physician who had a  malpractice suit and disciplinary action filed against him.
Grassley  said whoever made this decision needs to be held accountable and that  the Public Use File in question should be fully restored on the HRSA  website.  "Department officials are misguided if they think they can  make this issue go away with the response sent to my first letter of  inquiry," Grassley said.  "This database contains information intended  for public consumption, and efforts to shutter access will be fought by  those of us committed to transparency where public dollars and the  public interest are at stake."
Click here to read Grassley's November 3 letter.  Click here to read Grassley's October 7 letter.  Click here to read Grassley's October 17 letter.  Click here to read the response from the HRSA Administrator to Grassley's October 7 letter and attachments one, two and three.
 
In addition, below is the text of Grassley's November 3 letter.
 
November 3, 2011
 
The Honorable Kathleen Sebelius
Secretary
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
200 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, D.C., 20201
 
Dear Secretary Sebelius:
On  October 7, 2011, I wrote to the Health Research and Services  Administration (HRSA) regarding its decision to remove the publically  available National Practitioner Data Bank's (NPDB) Public Use File (PUF)  from its website.  For years the PUF has served as the backbone in  providing transparency for bad acting healthcare practitioners and has  been used by researchers and consumer groups to calculate trends in  disciplinary actions by state medical boards.
On  November 1, 2011, HRSA responded to my letter and provided a set of  heavily redacted documents.  However, HRSA failed to respond fully, and  the information provided raises additional concerns.  For example,  question 4 asked who was responsible for the decision to remove public  access to the PUF and the response merely said it was made by HRSA  leadership.
Question  1 asks HRSA how it reconciles the claim in the letter to Mr. Bavley  that "information reported to the NPDB is confidential and it's not to  be disclosed or redisclosed outside of HHS except in furtherance of  professional review activities" with the fact that the statute clearly  contemplates that the data will be public in a de-identified form. HRSA  responded by stating:
The  initial information HRSA received did not indicate Mr. Bavley had used  the Public Use File (PUF).  . . . HRSA's letters related to use of  confidential data from NPDB itself-not from the Public Use File.  Mr.  Bavley subsequently informed HRSA that he had not used the NPDB, but had  instead conducted research using data from the PUF.
HRSA's  response makes it apparent that HRSA simply accepted the complaint of  the physician involved at face value and jumped to conclusions about how  Mr. Bavley obtained the information.  Once HRSA learned of its mistake,  it then compounded the error by shutting down access to information  that Congress intended to be public through the PUF.  All Mr. Bavley did  was use publicly available data, and HRSA's response to that was to  shut down access to that data for everyone.  Moreover, HRSA has still  failed to restore the PUF to its website.
Perhaps  more puzzling is why HRSA was going against its mandate with respect to  the NPDB PUF.  The intent of the legislation that created the PUF was  to enhance the quality of healthcare, encourage greater efforts in  professional peer review and restrict the ability of incompetent  healthcare practitioners to relocate without discovery of previous  substandard performance or unprofessional conduct.  However, from the  documents provided by HRSA it appears that instead of protecting the  interest of public health, its purpose was to protect a single physician  who had a malpractice suit and disciplinary action filed against him.
Instead  of conducting its own research into the professional conduct of Dr.  Tenny, HRSA appears to have over reacted to the complaint of a single  physician based on no evidence other than that he received a call from  the press.   This action, and the subsequent action of removing public  access to the PUF, flies in the face of HRSA's mandate to enhance the  quality of healthcare.
In  light of all these circumstances, full public access to the PUF should  be restored to HRSA's website immediately.  Additionally, I request that  the individual at HRSA  responsible for the decision to remove the public access to the PUF come  in and brief my staff immediately.  As part of this briefing, please  bring the unredacted copies of all documents HRSA supplied as part of my  initial inquiry.
Should you have any questions regarding this letter, please contact Erika Smith of the Senate Judiciary Committee staff at (202) 224-5225.  Thank you for your immediate attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Charles E. Grassley
Ranking Member