Democratic National Committee Names Medical Privacy ‘Top’ Campaign Issue
The Democratic National Committee for the first time has named medical privacy a "top campaign policy issue" and plans to urge Democratic candidates to "push opponents to take a stance" on the issue, TechnologyDaily/PM reports. The DNC announced the decision in an email sent on March 29 to supporters in response to a Bush administration proposal to ease federal medical privacy regulations (Vaida, Technology Daily/PM, 3/29). The administration has proposed a series of changes, including easing a rule that requires providers, health insurers and pharmacies to obtain written consent from patients before they disclose medical records. The requirement would state that patients "must at some point be notified about their privacy rights by those who use their records" for treatment and payment of claims (Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, 3/22). The DNC also encouraged supporters to send emails to the White House to urge President Bush not to offer "another gift to the special interests in the insurance industry." DNC spokesperson Bill Buck said, "President Bush made this issue political by stripping Americans of their medical privacy rights. We will urge Democrats to challenge opponents to make a decision about whether they are with individual rights for medical privacy or whether they are with the Bush administration."
'Popular Polling Issue'
Medical privacy has become a "popular polling issue" over the past several years, although "secondary" to "broader domestic issues," TechnologyDaily/PM reports. A number of candidates, including Bush, campaigned on the issue in the 2000 elections. Electronic Privacy Information Center Executive Director Marc Rotenberg, an advocate of medical privacy, predicted that the issue "certainly will resonate with voters" in the 2002 elections, "particularly because Bush campaigned on supporting legislation to protect medical privacy that included prior consent before medical information could be shared." He said, "The administration should be held accountable for what it does and doesn't do with privacy. ... [D]uring the campaign, Bush said he favored medical privacy legislation. ... So this is an about-face" (TechnologyDaily/PM, 3/29).