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Not-So-Confidential HIV Testing

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The Michigan health department has been secretly collecting information on people who test for HIV at federally funded clinics. For a decade.

Since 2003, the Michigan Department of Community Health has been secretly collecting the names, dates of birth, risk categories, and other demographic information of people submitting for confidential HIV testing at grant-funded locations throughout the state and storing them in a massive database, a months-long investigation by The American Independent has discovered.

The database also includes the coded identities of people who have been identified as sexual and needle-sharing partners of persons living with HIV.

The state says this database is necessary to track the number of tests conducted using federal grants, as well as to determine reach and success of targeted testing programs designed to draw in people who are at high risk for HIV infection.

All the information that is collected is maintained in the database “indefinitely,” said MDCH spokeswoman Angela Minicuci, and a person whose information is captured does not have a way to remove it.

While MDCH claims the database does not contain personally identifiable information, arecent study, published last month in the University of California Press’ journal Social Problems, has found that some Michigan local health departments with access to the database are using it to pursue both civil actions – known as “health threat to others” actions – and criminal prosecutions against people living with HIV.

The study, authored by University of Michigan Ph.D. candidate Trevor Hoppe, found that the database has been used specifically to identify and target sexual or needle-sharing partners of newly diagnosed HIV-positive persons where the infected person may not have disclosed his or her status to partners; women who are HIV-positive and have become pregnant; and HIV-positive persons who have been diagnosed with other sexually transmitted infections.

Michigan law requires that funded agencies provide two options for HIV testing. The first is anonymous testing, where a code is used in place of a client’s name. The second option is confidential testing, where the state certified tester is given a client’s name along with other personally identifying information. Only those who opt for a confidential test will receive a piece of paper with their name and test results.

The department argues that this is not a names-based or identity-based database because the name, date of birth, and gender are encoded through a special formula in the database. The code, which is unique to each individual, is used to file testing and counseling information relative to that specific person. It is called a “unique identifying number” (UIN).

“There is no ‘path’ for ‘persons’ (if person refers to an individual who has received a confidential HIV test at a publically funded testing site that enters data into the HIV Event System) to ‘remove their name and information’ from the HIV Event System because no names are saved in the system,” Minicuci said in an email to The American Independent.

“It is not possible for us to match a person (as defined above) to a HIV Event System record or records, using just her/his name and date of birth,” she continued. “We would also need the agency that the person was tested at, the date of the test, and additional information to ensure that the correct record was identified. It is highly unlikely that a person (as defined above) would have evidence to prove that they were tested at a specific agency, on a specific date, etc. In other words using just a name and date of birth would not allow us to guarantee that we had found that person’s record.”

But MDCH acknowledged that a user – for example, a local health department disease investigator – can, in fact, enter data for, say, “John Doe” into the computer program to create a UIN and obtain the corresponding number. With that UIN, an authorized user can search and read records for that person.

Minicuci said there is no way to be certain the records one is reviewing belong to a specific person, because the name does not appear in the system.

A state document created by MDCH explains that in Michigan test results are confidential. It specifically states that, “All positive HIV tests are reported to the health department.” It does not disclose, however, that negative tests results are also being reported and collected by the state.

Multiple state-certified HIV testers confirmed with TAI that they are taught in mandatory certification training to tell clients that testing information is kept confidential but not to mention that the information is collected and maintained by the state. The testers, who are employed by various agencies receiving MDCH money to conduct HIV testing, spoke on the condition of anonymity out of concern for their funding.

“’You have two options,” one tester said she tells clients, based on state-mandated certification training. “’You can test anonymously, where you don’t give us your name, but you do give us you date of birth and ZIP code. Or you can test confidentially, where you do give us you name but that is not shared with anyone unless you test positive; and then it is shared with the health department.’”

“It is not standard practice to review with testing clients what data is entered into the HIV Event System, or how client data is encrypted using the Health Resources Service Administration algorithm,” Minicuci said. “Clients must, under Michigan law, be provided with the option to be tested anonymously or confidentially. The difference between these types of tests are described and any questions the client has are answered before the counselor obtains the client’s consent to be tested.”

As of June 2012, the Michigan HIV Event System contained 701,281 entries, according to documents TAI obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. Of those, 579,990 are of HIV-negative test results; 483,628 of 701,281 entries are confidential tests keyed to a person’s name with a UIN. In addition, 6,907 of these entries are from identified partners from partner services – a voluntary program to help those who are infected to contact current and past needle and sexual partners that they may have been exposed to the virus. And 4,041 of these partner-services entries are names-based UIN-coded entries.

The database became apparent when the department confirmed to TAI that it had initiated an internal investigation into whether the private health information of thousands of people with HIV and their partners had been improperly released. The state’s investigation found that a contractor had emailed some data within the HIV Event System from a protected government server – without encryption – to an email address at the company that created and maintains the database for the state. The state determined that no private information was released.

MDCH says information contained in the state database is intended to meet reporting requirements from the federal government. But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it only requires anonymous demographic information for grant reporting.

Other states, like Indiana, also track information on people testing for HIV using an identity-linked coding system.

But others do not, like Minnesota, which collects demographic information on people who get tested for HIV but does not track that data linked to any identity-linked coding system.

No other reportable disease in Michigan has a corresponding database like HIV, Minicuci said.

According to MDCH, 785 people have access to some component of the database system. Of those, 13 users have access to all components of the database – partner services, HIV testing, and HIV-positive identification. The general users are employed by local health departments in positions such as disease investigators, or those persons employed by AIDS service organizations who conduct testing at various locations throughout the state.

Minicuci said that new users are taught how to use the HIV Event System by other current users, and that no standard protocols exist outlining who can access what information from the database, for what reasons, and what can be done with it. The system also does not track who has accessed which information in the database – a so-called “digital fingerprint,” which Minicuci said “was not required” by the CDC in the development of the database.

All of this raises significant questions of privacy, civil liberties experts say.

“There are certainly privacy rights involved, particularly when clients are not being told that the information they are providing is being put in a database which can be utilized to assist with criminal prosecution of people living with HIV,” said Jay Kaplan, staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan LGBT Project. “It’s ironic that in its effort to try to prevent transmission of HIV as part of the HIV-testing process, this policy and practice will likely discourage people from being tested, because they fear criminal prosecution for having knowledge of their HIV status.”

Rose Saxe, from the National ACLU AIDS Project, also weighed in on the issue. She said the state is collecting confidential health information, but also “deeply personal information.”

“The state has a constitutional obligation to keep this information secure, and to protect the privacy rights of people testing for HIV,” Saxe told TAI in an email. “Because of the sensitivity of this information, the ACLU believes it is critically important that the state have in place policies to ensure that this information is used appropriately. This includes safeguards to prevent inadvertent disclosure, and ways to ensure that it is only accessed for legitimate reasons by health department employees. If the state cannot or does not undertake steps to protect this deeply private information about people in Michigan, it has no business collecting and storing it indefinitely.”

Saxe also raised a concern that those submitting for HIV testing are being misled about who will know that they have tested for the virus.

“Information we’ve received, however, suggests that the state is advising people that information will only be retained if they do have HIV,” Saxe said. “Misinforming people about the data that’s being collected is a breach of trust, and a violation of people’s rights to make informed decisions about how and when to test for HIV.”

Kaplan said people being tested under government-funded programs have a right to know what information is being collected and for what that information will be used.

“I believe [those testing for HIV] should be concerned and they should be informed about what happens to the information that they provide and what that information can be used for,” Kaplan said. “Under the current policy, to avoid having their info collected and used, they would have to either forgo HIV testing at local health departments, and seek out private testing sites (including their private physicians), both which may not be an option for everyone.”

Saxe said she is confused about why the state is collecting information on people who do not test positive for the virus.

“We also have serious questions about why the state is retaining private information about people who test negative for HIV,” she said. “Michigan would need a very good reason to justify keeping this information, and certainly should not be misleading people about what will happen with their private information.”

Cropped image (above) of a Michigan Department of Community Health brochure on HIV testing. Read the full brochure here.

 

 

This article, including all images, originally appeared at The American Independent and is republished here by permission with our deep thanks.

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OPINION

Noem Defends Shooting Her 14-Month Old Puppy to Death, Brags She Has Media ‘Gasping’

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Republican Governor Kristi Noem of South Dakota, a top potential Trump vice presidential running mate pick, revealed in a forthcoming book she “hated” her 14-month old puppy and shot it to death. Massive online outrage ensued, including accusations of “animal cruelty” and “cold-blooded murder,” but the pro-life former member of Congress is defending her actions and bragging she had the media “gasping.”

“Cricket was a wirehair pointer, about 14 months old,” Noem writes in her soon-to-be released book, according to The Guardian which reports “the dog, a female, had an ‘aggressive personality’ and needed to be trained to be used for hunting pheasant.”

“By taking Cricket on a pheasant hunt with older dogs, Noem says, she hoped to calm the young dog down and begin to teach her how to behave. Unfortunately, Cricket ruined the hunt, going ‘out of her mind with excitement, chasing all those birds and having the time of her life’.”

“Then, on the way home after the hunt, as Noem stopped to talk to a local family, Cricket escaped Noem’s truck and attacked the family’s chickens, ‘grabb[ing] one chicken at a time, crunching it to death with one bite, then dropping it to attack another’.”

READ MORE: President Hands Howard Stern Live Interview After NY Times Melts Down Over Biden Brush-Off

“Cricket the untrainable dog, Noem writes, behaved like ‘a trained assassin’.”

Except Cricket wasn’t trained. Online several people with experience training dogs have said Noem did everything wrong.

“I hated that dog,” Noem wrote, calling the young girl pup “untrainable,” “dangerous to anyone she came in contact with,” and “less than worthless … as a hunting dog.”

“At that moment,” Noem wrote, “I realized I had to put her down.”

“It was not a pleasant job,” she added, “but it had to be done. And after it was over, I realized another unpleasant job needed to be done.”

The Guardian reports Noem went on that day to slaughter a goat that “smelled ‘disgusting, musky, rancid’ and ‘loved to chase’ Noem’s children, knocking them down and ruining their clothes.”

She dragged both animals separately into a gravel pit and shot them one at a time. The puppy died after one shell, but the goat took two.

On social media Noem expressed no regret, no sadness, no empathy for the animals others say did not need to die, and certainly did not need to die so cruelly.

READ MORE: ‘Assassination of Political Rivals as an Official Act’: AOC Warns Take Trump ‘Seriously’

But she did use the opportunity to promote her book.

Attorney and legal analyst Jeffrey Evan Gold says Governor Noem’s actions might have violated state law.

“You slaughtered a 14-month-old puppy because it wasn’t good at the ‘job’ you chose for it?” he asked. “SD § 40-1-2.3. ‘No person owning or responsible for the care of an animal may neglect, abandon, or mistreat the animal.'”

The Democratic National Committee released a statement saying, “Kristi Noem’s extreme record goes beyond bizarre rants about killing her pets – she also previously said a 10-year-old rape victim should be forced to carry out her pregnancy, does not support exceptions for rape or incest, and has threatened to throw pharmacists in jail for providing medication abortions.”

Former Trump White House Director of Strategic Communications Alyssa Farah Griffin, now a co-host on “The View” wrote, “There are countless organizations that re-home dogs from owners who are incapable of properly training and caring for them.”

The Lincoln Project’s Rick Wilson blasted the South Dakota governor.

“Kristi Noem is trash,” he began. “Decades with hunting- and bird-dogs, and the number I’ve killed because they were chicken-sharp or had too much prey drive is ZERO. Puppies need slow exposure to birds, and bird-scent.”

“She killed a puppy because she was lazy at training bird dogs, not because it was a bad dog,” he added. “Not every dog is for the field, but 99.9% of them are trainable or re-homeable. We have one now who was never going in the field, but I didn’t kill her. She’s sleeping on the couch. You down old dogs, hurt dogs, and sick dogs humanely, not by shooting them and tossing them in a gravel pit. Unsporting and deliberately cruel…but she wrote this to prove the cruelty is the point.”

Melissa Jo Peltier, a writer and producer of the “Dog Whisperer with Cesar Millan” series, also heaped strong criticism on Noem.

“After 10+ years working with Cesar Millan & other highly specialized trainers, I believe NO dog should be put down just because they can’t or won’t do what we decide WE want them to,” Peltier said in a lengthy statement. “Dogs MUST be who they are. Sadly, that’s often who WE teach them to be. And our species is a hot mess. I would have happily taken Kristi Noem’s puppy & rehomed it. What she did is animal cruelty & cold blooded murder in my book.”

READ MORE: ‘Blood on Your Hands’: Tennessee Republicans OK Arming Teachers After Deadly School Shooting

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OPINION

President Hands Howard Stern Live Interview After NY Times Melts Down Over Biden Brush-Off

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President Joe Biden gave an nearly-unannounced, last-minute, live exclusive interview Friday morning to Howard Stern, the SiriusXM radio host who for decades, from the mid-1990s to about 2015, was a top Trump friend, fan, and aficionado. But the impetus behind the President’s move appears to be a rare and unsigned statement from the The New York Times Company, defending the “paper of record” after months of anger from the public over what some say is its biased negative coverage of the Biden presidency and, especially, a Thursday report by Politico claiming Times Publisher A.G. Sulzberger is furious the President has refused to give the “Grey Lady” an in-person  interview.

“The Times’ desire for a sit-down interview with Biden by the newspaper’s White House team is no secret around the West Wing or within the D.C. bureau,” Politico reported. “Getting the president on the record with the paper of record is a top priority for publisher A.G. Sulzberger. So much so that last May, when Vice President Kamala Harris arrived at the newspaper’s midtown headquarters for an off-the-record meeting with around 40 Times journalists, Sulzberger devoted several minutes to asking her why Biden was still refusing to grant the paper — or any major newspaper — an interview.”

“In Sulzberger’s view,” Politico explained, “only an interview with a paper like the Times can verify that the 81-year-old Biden is still fit to hold the presidency.”

But it was this statement that made Politico’s scoop go viral.

READ MORE: Justices’ Views on Trump Immunity Stun Experts: ‘Watching the Constitution Be Rewritten’

“’All these Biden people think that the problem is Peter Baker or whatever reporter they’re mad at that day,’ one Times journalist said. ‘It’s A.G. He’s the one who is pissed [that] Biden hasn’t done any interviews and quietly encourages all the tough reporting on his age.'”

Popular Information founder Judd Legum in March documented The New York Times’ (and other top papers’) obsession with Biden’s age after the Hur Report.

Thursday evening the Times put out a “scorching” statement, as Politico later reported, not on the newspaper’s website but on the company’s corporate website, not addressing the Politico piece directly but calling it “troubling” that President Biden “has so actively and effectively avoided questions from independent journalists during his term.”

Media watchers and critics pushed back on the Times’ statement.

READ MORE: ‘To Do God Knows What’: Local Elections Official Reads Lara Trump the Riot Act

“NYT issues an unprecedented statement slamming Biden for ‘actively and effectively avoid[ing] questions from independent journalists during his term’ and claiming it’s their ‘independence’ that Biden dislikes, when it’s actually that they’re dying to trip him up,” wrote media critic Dan Froomkin, editor of Press Watch.

Froomkin also pointed to a 2017 report from Poynter, a top journalism site published by The Poynter Institute, that pointed out the poor job the Times did of interviewing then-President Trump.

Others, including former Biden Deputy Secretary of State Brian McKeon, debunked the Times’ claim President Biden hasn’t given interviews to independent journalists by pointing to Biden’s interviews with CBS News’ “60 Minutes” and a 20-minute sit-down interview with veteran journalist John Harwood for ProPublica.

Former Chicago Sun-Times editor Mark Jacob, now a media critic who publishes Stop the Presses, offered a more colorful take of Biden’s decision to go on Howard Stern.

The Times itself just last month reported on a “wide-ranging interview” President Biden gave to The New Yorker.

Watch the video and read the social media posts above or at this link.

READ MORE: ‘Doesn’t Care if Pregnant Women Live or Die’: Alito Slammed Over Emergency Abortion Remarks

 

 

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CNN Smacks Down Trump Rant Courthouse So ‘Heavily Guarded’ MAGA Cannot Attend His Trial

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Donald Trump’s Friday morning claim Manhattan’s Criminal Courts Building is “heavily guarded” so his supporters cannot attend his trial was torched by a top CNN anchor. The ex-president, facing 34 felony charges in New York, had been urging his followers to show up and protest on the courthouse steps, but few have.

“I’m at the heavily guarded Courthouse. Security is that of Fort Knox, all so that MAGA will not be able to attend this trial, presided over by a highly conflicted pawn of the Democrat Party. It is a sight to behold! Getting ready to do my Courthouse presser. Two minutes!” Trump wrote Friday morning on his Truth Social account.

CNN’s Kaitlan Collins supplied a different view.

“Again, the courthouse is open the public. The park outside, where a handful of his supporters have gathered on trials days, is easily accessible,” she wrote minutes after his post.

READ MORE: ‘Assassination of Political Rivals as an Official Act’: AOC Warns Take Trump ‘Seriously’

Trump has tried to rile up his followers to come out and make a strong showing.

On Monday Trump urged his supporters to “rally behind MAGA” and “go out and peacefully protest” at courthouses across the country, while complaining that “people who truly LOVE our Country, and want to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, are not allowed to ‘Peacefully Protest,’ and are rudely and systematically shut down and ushered off to far away ‘holding areas,’ essentially denying them their Constitutional Rights.”

On Wednesday Trump claimed, “The Courthouse area in Lower Manhattan is in a COMPLETE LOCKDOWN mode, not for reasons of safety, but because they don’t want any of the thousands of MAGA supporters to be present. If they did the same thing at Columbia, and other locations, there would be no problem with the protesters!”

After detailing several of his false claims about security measures prohibiting his followers from being able to show their support and protest, CNN published a fact-check on Wednesday:

“Trump’s claims are all false. The police have not turned away ‘thousands of people’ from the courthouse during his trial; only a handful of Trump supporters have shown up to demonstrate near the building,” CNN reported.

“And while there are various security measures in place in the area, including some street closures enforced by police officers and barricades, it’s not true that ‘for blocks you can’t get near this courthouse.’ In reality, the designated protest zone for the trial is at a park directly across the street from the courthouse – and, in addition, people are permitted to drive right up to the front of the courthouse and walk into the building, which remains open to the public. If people show up early enough in the morning, they can even get into the trial courtroom itself or the overflow room that shows near-live video of the proceedings.”

READ MORE: Justices’ Views on Trump Immunity Stun Experts: ‘Watching the Constitution Be Rewritten’

 

 

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