Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records Notice, 17447-17450 [2015-07444]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Notices
93.701, ARRA Related Biomedical Research
and Research Supports Awards, National
Institutes of Health, HHS)
Dated: March 26, 2015.
Melanie J. Gray,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
This notice is being published less than 15
days prior to the meeting due to the timing
limitations imposed by the review and
funding cycle.
(Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Nos. 93.866, Aging Research,
National Institutes of Health, HHS)
Dated: March 26, 2015.
Melanie J. Gray,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–07343 Filed 3–31–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
[FR Doc. 2015–07339 Filed 3–31–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
National Institute on Aging; Notice of
Closed Meetings
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Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended (5 U.S.C. App.), notice is
hereby given of the following meetings.
The meetings will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections
552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), Title 5 U.S.C.,
as amended. The grant applications and
the discussions could disclose
confidential trade secrets or commercial
property such as patentable material,
and personal information concerning
individuals associated with the grant
applications, the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Institute on
Aging Special Emphasis Panel; Immune
System and Aging.
Date: April 15, 2015.
Time: 9:45 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institute on Aging,
Gateway Building, Suite 2C212, 7201
Wisconsin Avenue, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Contact Person: Alicja L. Markowska,
Ph.D., DSC., Scientific Review Branch,
National Institute on Aging, 7201 Wisconsin
Avenue, Suite 2C212, Bethesda, MD 20892,
301–496–9666, markowsa@nia.nih.gov.
This notice is being published less than 15
days prior to the meeting due to the timing
limitations imposed by the review and
funding cycle.
Name of Committee: National Institute on
Aging Special Emphasis Panel;
Neuromuscular Interactions.
Date: April 22, 2015.
Time: 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institute on Aging,
Gateway Building, Suite 2C212, 7201
Wisconsin Avenue, Bethesda, MD 20892,
(Telephone Conference Call).
Contact Person: Alicja L. Markowska,
Ph.D., DSC., Scientific Review Branch,
National Institute on Aging, 7201 Wisconsin
Avenue, Suite 2C212, Bethesda, MD 20892,
301–496–9666, markowsa@nia.nih.gov.
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
Privacy Act of 1974; System of
Records Notice
Office of the Secretary (OS),
Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice to establish a new system
of records and delete an existing system
of records.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974,
as amended (5 U.S.C. 552a), HHS is
establishing a new department-wide
system of records, ‘‘Records about
Restricted Dataset Requesters,’’ System
Number 09–90–1401, to cover records
about individuals within and outside
HHS who request restricted datasets and
software products from HHS (e.g., for
health-related scientific research and
study purposes), when HHS maintains
the requester records in a system from
which they are retrieved directly by an
individual requester’s name or other
personal identifier. The System of
Records Notice (SORN) previously
published at 78 FR 32654 for ‘‘Online
Application Ordering for Products from
the Healthcare Cost and Utilization
Project (HCUP),’’ System Number 09–
35–0003, is being deleted and replaced
by this new department-wide SORN.
DATES: Effective Dates: The departmentwide SORN proposed in this Notice is
effective upon publication, with the
exception of the routine uses. The
routine uses will be effective 30 days
after publication of this Notice, unless
comments are received that warrant
revisions to this Notice. Written
comments on the routine uses should be
submitted within 30 days. The deletion
of System Number 09–35–0003 will be
effective 30 days after publication of
this Notice.
ADDRESSES: The public should address
written comments to: Beth Kramer, HHS
Privacy Act Officer, Mary E. Switzer
SUMMARY:
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Building—Room 2210, 330 C Street
SW., Washington, DC 20201,
beth.kramer@hhs.gov. Comments will
be available for public viewing at the
same location. To review comments in
person, please contact Beth Kramer at
beth.kramer@hhs.gov or (202) 690–6941.
Beth
Kramer, HHS Privacy Act Officer, Mary
E. Switzer Building—Room 2210, 330 C
Street SW., Washington, DC 20201,
beth.kramer@hhs.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
The new
system of records will cover records
about individuals within and outside
HHS who request restricted datasets and
software products from HHS, when HHS
maintains the requester records in a
system from which they are retrieved
directly by an individual requester’s
name or other personal identifier.
‘‘Restricted’’ datasets and software
products are those that HHS makes
affirmatively available to qualified
members of the public but provides
subject to restrictions, because they
contain identifiable data and/or
anonymized data that has the potential,
when combined with other data, to
identify the particular individuals, such
as patients or providers, whose
information is represented in the data.
The datasets and products are made
available through an on-line or paperbased ordering and delivery system that
provides them to qualified requesters
electronically or by mail.
The restrictions are necessary to
protect the privacy of individuals whose
information is represented in the
datasets or software products. The
restrictions typically limit the data
requester to using the data for research,
analysis, study, and aggregate statistical
reporting; prohibit any attempt to
identify any individual or establishment
represented in the data; and require
specific security measures to safeguard
the data from unauthorized access. HHS
is required by law to impose, monitor,
and enforce the restrictions (see, for
example, provisions in the Confidential
Information Protection and Statistical
Efficiency Act of 2002 (CIPSEA), 44
U.S.C. 3501 at note). To impose and
enforce the restrictions, it is necessary
to collect information about the data
requesters.
Currently, this system of records
covers data requester records in
ordering and delivery systems
administered by three HHS Operating
Divisions, but only to the extent that the
records pertain to requesters seeking
restricted datasets. These ordering and
delivery systems retrieve requester
records directly by personal identifier:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
National Institutes of Health
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 62 / Wednesday, April 1, 2015 / Notices
• Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality (AHRQ) ‘‘Online
Application Ordering for Products from
the Healthcare Cost and Utilization
Project (HCUP).’’ HCUP is an online
system established in 2013; it makes
restricted databases and software
available for qualified applicants to
purchase for scientific research and
public health use. Applicants may be
researchers, patients, consumers,
practitioners, providers, policy makers,
or educators. The HCUP databases are
annual files containing anonymous
information from hospital discharge
records for inpatient care and certain
components of outpatient care. The
HCUP software tools enhance the use of
the data. The online system supports
AHRQ’s mission of promoting
improvements in health care quality.
• Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) ‘‘Data Agreement & Data
Shipping Tracking System (DADSS).’’
DADSS was established in 2004 to track
authorization, payment status, shipping
status, and ownership of restricted and
unrestricted data extracts between CMS,
its contractors, and other authorized
entities. DADSS is slated to be replaced
in 2015 with an electronic information
system designed to provide a traceable
record of CMS’ data disclosures.
• Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA) ‘‘Online Application for the
Data Portal (SAMHDA).’’ This online
data portal was established in 2013 to
more efficiently make restricted datasets
from SAMHSA available to designated,
approved researchers. The Data Portal
and all applications are maintained
through the Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Data Archive (SAMHDA).
Currently, data from the Drug Abuse
Warning Network (DAWN), DAWN
Medical Examiner/Coroner component,
National Survey on Drug Use and
Health (NSDUH), and NSDUH Adult
Clinical Interview data are available
through the portal. Data recipients must
complete a web-based application
process and receive project approval
from SAMHSA’s Center for Behavioral
Health and Statistics and Quality
(CBHSQ), and can use the datasets for
statistical purposes only. No fees are
charged for the datasets. The online
portal supports SAMHSA’s mission to
make substance use and mental disorder
information and research more
accessible.
Note that this system of records does
not include:
• Records about requesters who seek
unrestricted datasets, publications, or
other information products from an
HHS on-line or paper-based ordering
and delivery system. Unrestricted
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materials are also proactively made
available to the public by HHS, but are
released without restrictions (though
some may be subject to terms or
conditions of use and require
registration for an account and payment
of a fee). Because the requests or order
forms collect minimal information about
the requester (i.e., the requester’s name,
mailing address or email address,
telephone number, or other contact or
delivery information, and payment
information if a fee is imposed) they
would be adequately covered by other
SORNs (for example, ‘‘Correspondence
Tracking Management System (CTMS)’’
SORN #09–70–3005; ‘‘Consumer
Mailing List’’ SORN #09–90–0041; and
‘‘Unified Financial Management System
(UFMS)’’ SORN #09–90–0024 if a fee is
involved), if a SORN is required (i.e., if
the records are retrieved directly by an
individual requester’s name or other
personal identifier). Examples include
records about requesters who order
materials online from AHRQ’s
Publications Online Store &
Clearinghouse or by mail from AHRQ’s
Publications Clearinghouse, which
provide only unrestricted publications
and other information products; and
records about requesters ordering
unrestricted datasets from CMS’s
current DADSS system and its
successor, which processes orders for
both restricted and unrestricted
datasets.
• Records about data requesters that
are not retrieved directly by an
individual requester’s name or other
personal identifier. These records are
not subject to the Privacy Act and are
not required to be covered in a SORN,
even when they are associated with a
restricted dataset and include additional
information about the requester (such
as, the requester’s intended research
purpose, qualifications, signed Data Use
Agreement, and confidentiality training
certificate). An example would be
requester records that are retrieved first
by a dataset name and/or a requesting
entity’s name, and then by an individual
researcher’s or record custodian’s name.
The Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a)
governs the means by which the U.S.
Government collects, maintains, and
uses information about individuals in a
system of records. A ‘‘system of
records’’ is a group of any records under
the control of a federal agency from
which information about an individual
is retrieved by the individual’s name or
other personal identifier. The Privacy
Act requires each agency to publish in
the Federal Register a system of records
notice (SORN) identifying and
describing each system of records the
agency maintains, including the
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purposes for which the agency uses
information about individuals in the
system, the routine uses for which the
agency discloses such information
outside the agency, and how individual
record subjects can exercise their rights
under the Privacy Act.
A report on the proposed new system
of records has been sent to OMB and
Congress in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
552a(r).
SYSTEM NUMBER:
09–90–1401
SYSTEM NAME:
Records About Restricted Dataset
Requesters
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Unclassified
SYSTEM LOCATIONS:
Electronic files are maintained at the
following server locations:
• AHRQ: Social & Scientific Systems
Data Center, Ashburn, Virginia
• CMS: CMS Data Center, Baltimore,
Maryland
• SAMHSA: Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Data Archive, Rockville,
Maryland
Hard-copy files are maintained at the
System Manager locations; see ‘‘System
Manager(s)’’ section below.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
Individuals within and outside HHS
who request restricted datasets and
software products that HHS makes
proactively available to qualified
members of the public, usually for
health-related scientific research and
study purposes. Examples include
individual researchers and records
custodians, project officers, or other
representatives of entities such as
universities, government agencies, and
research organizations.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
Categories of records include:
1. Request records, containing the
requester’s name and contact
information (telephone number, mailing
address, email address), affiliated entity
(e.g., if making the request as a records
custodian or other employee), and a
description of the dataset requested.
2. Order fulfillment records,
containing user registration information
such as email address and IP address (if
the requester is provided access to the
dataset electronically through a public
access web portal or link) or mailing
information (if the dataset is mailed to
the requester on a disk or other media),
and tracking information (providing
proof of delivery).
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3. Data use restriction records,
containing the requester’s identification,
contact, and affiliated entity
information, qualifications, intended
use of the data (e.g., study name,
contract number), confidentiality
training documentation (e.g., a coded
number indicating the individual
completed required confidentiality
training), signed and notarized data use
agreement documents (e.g., Affidavit of
Nondisclosure; Declaration of
Nondisclosure; Confidential Data Use
and Nondisclosure Agreement
(CDUNA); Individual Designations of
Agent; DUA number and expiration
date), tracking information, and any onsite inspection information.
4. Payment records (if a fee is
charged), consisting of the requester’s
credit card account name, number, and
billing address, or bank routing number
and checking account name, address,
and number.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
AHRQ: 42 U.S.C. 299–299a; 42 U.S.C.
299c–2
CMS: 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(10); 45 CFR
164.514(e); 44 U.S.C. 3544; 42 U.S.C.
1306
SAMHDA: 42 U.S.C. 290aa(d)(1); 44
U.S.C. 3501(8)
See also: CIPSEA, codified at 44
U.S.C. 3501 note.
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PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
The purposes of this system of records
is to provide restricted datasets and
software products to qualified data
requesters in a timely and efficient
manner and consistent with applicable
laws, and to enable HHS to enforce data
requesters’ compliance with use and
security restrictions that apply to the
data. Relevant HHS personnel use the
records on a need-to-know basis for
those purposes; specifically:
• Contact and user registration
information is used to communicate
with the requester, enable the requester
to access requested data electronically
(for example, the requester’s email
address would be used to register the
requester to use a public access web
portal or link, and to notify the
requester when data has been delivered
electronically to his registered account),
locate the requester (e.g., for on-site
inspections or to otherwise check
compliance with the data use
agreement), and deliver and track data
provided by mail (e.g., to document
receipt for enforcement purposes and
report lost shipments to security
personnel).
• Qualifications, planned use of the
data, confidentiality training
information, signed data use agreement,
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data receipt information, on-site
inspection information, and information
about data breaches or contract
violations is used to grant the request
(consistent with data use restrictions) or
deny the request, bind the requester to
the applicable data use restrictions and
other security requirements, conduct
on-site inspections or otherwise check
the requester’s compliance with the data
use agreement, enforce the agreement if
breached, and share information about
data breaches and contract violations
with other HHS components
administering restricted dataset requests
involving the same requesters.
• Payment information is used to
collect any applicable fee. Any payment
information shared with HHS
accounting and debt collection systems
is also covered under the accounting
and debt collection systems’ SORNs and
is subject to the routine uses published
in those SORNs (see, e.g., United
Financial Management System, SORN
#09–90–0024; and Debt Management
and Collection System, SORN #09–40–
0012).
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
Information about an individual data
requester may be disclosed to parties
outside HHS without the individual’s
prior, written consent pursuant to the
following routine uses:
1. Disclosures may be made to federal
agencies and Department contractors
that have been engaged by HHS to assist
in accomplishment of an HHS function
relating to the purposes of this system
of records and that have a need to have
access to the records in order to assist
HHS in performing the activity. Any
contractor will be required to comply
with the requirements of the Privacy
Act.
2. Records may be disclosed to
student volunteers, individuals working
under a personal services contract, and
other individuals performing functions
relating to the purposes of this system
of records for the Department but
technically not having the status of
agency employees, if they need access to
the records in order to perform their
assigned agency functions.
3. CMS records may be disclosed to a
CMS contractor (including but not
limited to Medicare Administrative
Contractors, fiscal intermediaries, and
carriers) that assists in the
administration of a CMS-administered
health benefits program, or to a grantee
of a CMS-administered grant program,
when disclosure is deemed reasonably
necessary by CMS to prevent, deter,
discover, detect, investigate, examine,
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17449
prosecute, sue with respect to, defend
against, correct, remedy, or otherwise
combat fraud, waste, or abuse in such
program.
4. Records may be disclosed to
another federal agency or an
instrumentality of any governmental
jurisdiction within or under the control
of the United States (including any state
or local governmental agency) that
administers federally funded programs,
or that has the authority to investigate,
potential fraud, waste or abuse in
federally funded programs, when
disclosure is deemed reasonably
necessary by HHS to prevent, deter,
discover, detect, investigate, examine,
prosecute, sue with respect to, defend
against, correct, remedy or otherwise
combat fraud, waste or abuse in such
programs.
5. When a record on its face, or in
conjunction with other records,
indicates a violation or potential
violation of law, whether civil, criminal
or regulatory in nature, and whether
arising by general statute or particular
program statute, or by regulation, rule,
or order issued pursuant thereto,
disclosure may be made to the
appropriate public authority, whether
federal, foreign, state, local, tribal, or
otherwise, responsible for enforcing,
investigating or prosecuting the
violation or charged with enforcing or
implementing the statute, rule,
regulation, or order issued pursuant
thereto, if the information disclosed is
relevant to the enforcement, regulatory,
investigative, or prosecutorial
responsibility of the receiving entity.
6. Information may be disclosed to the
U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) or to a
court or other tribunal, when:
a. The agency or any component
thereof, or
b. any employee of the agency in his
or her official capacity, or
c. any employee of the agency in his
or her individual capacity where DOJ
has agreed to represent the employee, or
d. the United States Government,
is a party to litigation or has an interest
in such litigation and, by careful review,
HHS determines that the records are
both relevant and necessary to the
litigation and that, therefore, the use of
such records by the DOJ, court or other
tribunal is deemed by HHS to be
compatible with the purpose for which
the agency collected the records.
7. Records may be disclosed to a
federal, foreign, state, local, tribal, or
other public authority of the fact that
this system of records contains
information relevant to the hiring or
retention of an employee, the retention
of a security clearance, the letting of a
contract, or the issuance or retention of
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a license, grant or other benefit. The
other agency or licensing organization
may then make a request supported by
the written consent of the individual for
further information if it so chooses. HHS
will not make an initial disclosure
unless the information has been
determined to be sufficiently reliable to
support a referral to another office
within the agency or to another federal
agency for criminal, civil,
administrative, personnel, or regulatory
action.
8. Information may be disclosed to a
Member of Congress or Congressional
staff member in response to a written
inquiry of the Congressional office made
at the written request of the constituent
about whom the record is maintained.
The Congressional office does not have
any greater authority to obtain records
than the individual would have if
requesting the records directly.
9. Records may be disclosed to the
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) if captured in an intrusion
detection system used by HHS and DHS
pursuant to a DHS cybersecurity
program that monitors Internet traffic to
and from federal government computer
networks to prevent a variety of types of
cybersecurity incidents.
10. Disclosures may be made to
appropriate federal agencies and
Department contractors that have a need
to know the information for the purpose
of assisting the Department’s efforts to
respond to a suspected or confirmed
breach of the security or confidentiality
of information maintained in this
system of records, when the information
disclosed is relevant and necessary to
that assistance.
Information about an individual data
requester may also be disclosed from
this system of records to parties outside
HHS without the individual’s consent
for any of the uses authorized directly
in the Privacy Act at 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(2)
and (b)(4)–(11).
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORING,
RETRIEVING, ACCESSING, RETAINING, AND
DISPOSING OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM—
STORAGE:
Records are stored in electronic
databases and hard-copy files. DADSS,
and its successors’, records may also be
stored on portable media.
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RETRIEVABILITY:
Records are retrieved by the data
requester’s name, registrant/user name,
User ID number, or data use agreement
(DUA) number.
SAFEGUARDS:
Records are safeguarded in
accordance with applicable laws, rules
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and policies, including the HHS
Information Technology Security
Program Handbook, all pertinent
National Institutes of Standards and
Technology (NIST) publications, and
OMB Circular A–130, Management of
Federal Resources. Records are
protected from unauthorized access
through appropriate administrative,
physical, and technical safeguards.
Safeguards conform to the HHS
Information Security and Privacy
Program, https://www.hhs.gov/ocio/
securityprivacy/. The safeguards include
protecting the facilities where records
are stored or accessed with security
guards, badges and cameras, securing
hard-copy records in locked file
cabinets, file rooms or offices during offduty hours, limiting access to electronic
databases to authorized users based on
roles and the principle of least privilege,
and two-factor authentication (user ID
and password), using a secured
operating system protected by
encryption, firewalls, and intrusion
detection systems, using an SSL
connection for secure encrypted
transmissions, requiring encryption for
records stored on removable media, and
training personnel in Privacy Act and
information security requirements.
RETENTION AND DISPOSAL:
Records needed to enforce data use
restrictions are retained for 20 years by
AHRQ (see DAA–0510–2013–0003–
0001) and 5 years by CMS (see N1–440–
10–04) after the agreement is closed,
and may be kept longer if necessary for
enforcement, audit, legal, or other
purposes. The equivalent SAMHSA
records will be retained indefinitely
until a disposition schedule is approved
by the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). SAMHSA
anticipates proposing a 5 year retention
period to NARA. Records of payments
made electronically are transmitted
securely to a Payment Card Industrycompliant payment gateway for
processing and are not stored. Records
of payments made by check, purchase
order, or wire transfer are disposed of
once the funds have been received.
Records are disposed of using
destruction methods prescribed by NIST
SP 800–88.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS(ES):
• AHRQ: HCUP Project Officer,
Center for Delivery, Organization, and
Markets, 540 Gaither Road, Rockville,
MD 20850; Telephone: 301–427–1410;
HCUP@AHRQ.GOV.
• CMS: DADSS and its successor,
Division of Data and Information
Dissemination, Data Development and
Services Group, Office of Enterprise
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Data and Analytics, Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, 7500
Security Boulevard, Mailstop: B2–29–
04, Office Location: B2–03–37,
Baltimore, MD 21244–1870.
• SAMHSA: SAMHDA Project
Officer, CBHSQ, 1 Choke Cherry Road,
Rockville, MD 20857.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURE:
An individual who wishes to know if
this system of records contains records
about him or her should submit a
written request to the relevant System
Manager at the address indicated above.
The individual must verify his or her
identity by providing either a notarized
request or a written certification that the
requester is who he or she claims to be
and understands that the knowing and
willful request for acquisition of a
record pertaining to an individual under
false pretenses is a criminal offense
under the Privacy Act, subject to a five
thousand dollar fine.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURE:
Same as notification procedure.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
An individual seeking to amend the
content of information about him or her
in this system should contact the
relevant System Manager and
reasonably identify the record, specify
the information contested, state the
corrective action sought, and provide
the reasons for the amendment, with
supporting justification.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Information in this system of records
is obtained directly from the individual
data requester to whom it applies, or is
derived from information supplied by
the individual or provided by HHS
officials.
EXEMPTIONS CLAIMED FOR THIS SYSTEM:
None.
Celeste Dade-Vinson,
Health Insurance Specialist, Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2015–07444 Filed 3–31–15; 8:45 a.m.]
BILLING CODE 4120–03–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2014–N–0964]
Jun Yang: Debarment Order
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 62 (Wednesday, April 1, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17447-17450]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-07444]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records Notice
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary (OS), Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice to establish a new system of records and delete an
existing system of records.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the requirements of the Privacy Act of
1974, as amended (5 U.S.C. 552a), HHS is establishing a new department-
wide system of records, ``Records about Restricted Dataset
Requesters,'' System Number 09-90-1401, to cover records about
individuals within and outside HHS who request restricted datasets and
software products from HHS (e.g., for health-related scientific
research and study purposes), when HHS maintains the requester records
in a system from which they are retrieved directly by an individual
requester's name or other personal identifier. The System of Records
Notice (SORN) previously published at 78 FR 32654 for ``Online
Application Ordering for Products from the Healthcare Cost and
Utilization Project (HCUP),'' System Number 09-35-0003, is being
deleted and replaced by this new department-wide SORN.
DATES: Effective Dates: The department-wide SORN proposed in this
Notice is effective upon publication, with the exception of the routine
uses. The routine uses will be effective 30 days after publication of
this Notice, unless comments are received that warrant revisions to
this Notice. Written comments on the routine uses should be submitted
within 30 days. The deletion of System Number 09-35-0003 will be
effective 30 days after publication of this Notice.
ADDRESSES: The public should address written comments to: Beth Kramer,
HHS Privacy Act Officer, Mary E. Switzer Building--Room 2210, 330 C
Street SW., Washington, DC 20201, beth.kramer@hhs.gov. Comments will be
available for public viewing at the same location. To review comments
in person, please contact Beth Kramer at beth.kramer@hhs.gov or (202)
690-6941.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Beth Kramer, HHS Privacy Act Officer,
Mary E. Switzer Building--Room 2210, 330 C Street SW., Washington, DC
20201, beth.kramer@hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The new system of records will cover records
about individuals within and outside HHS who request restricted
datasets and software products from HHS, when HHS maintains the
requester records in a system from which they are retrieved directly by
an individual requester's name or other personal identifier.
``Restricted'' datasets and software products are those that HHS makes
affirmatively available to qualified members of the public but provides
subject to restrictions, because they contain identifiable data and/or
anonymized data that has the potential, when combined with other data,
to identify the particular individuals, such as patients or providers,
whose information is represented in the data. The datasets and products
are made available through an on-line or paper-based ordering and
delivery system that provides them to qualified requesters
electronically or by mail.
The restrictions are necessary to protect the privacy of
individuals whose information is represented in the datasets or
software products. The restrictions typically limit the data requester
to using the data for research, analysis, study, and aggregate
statistical reporting; prohibit any attempt to identify any individual
or establishment represented in the data; and require specific security
measures to safeguard the data from unauthorized access. HHS is
required by law to impose, monitor, and enforce the restrictions (see,
for example, provisions in the Confidential Information Protection and
Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002 (CIPSEA), 44 U.S.C. 3501 at note).
To impose and enforce the restrictions, it is necessary to collect
information about the data requesters.
Currently, this system of records covers data requester records in
ordering and delivery systems administered by three HHS Operating
Divisions, but only to the extent that the records pertain to
requesters seeking restricted datasets. These ordering and delivery
systems retrieve requester records directly by personal identifier:
[[Page 17448]]
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) ``Online
Application Ordering for Products from the Healthcare Cost and
Utilization Project (HCUP).'' HCUP is an online system established in
2013; it makes restricted databases and software available for
qualified applicants to purchase for scientific research and public
health use. Applicants may be researchers, patients, consumers,
practitioners, providers, policy makers, or educators. The HCUP
databases are annual files containing anonymous information from
hospital discharge records for inpatient care and certain components of
outpatient care. The HCUP software tools enhance the use of the data.
The online system supports AHRQ's mission of promoting improvements in
health care quality.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) ``Data
Agreement & Data Shipping Tracking System (DADSS).'' DADSS was
established in 2004 to track authorization, payment status, shipping
status, and ownership of restricted and unrestricted data extracts
between CMS, its contractors, and other authorized entities. DADSS is
slated to be replaced in 2015 with an electronic information system
designed to provide a traceable record of CMS' data disclosures.
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA) ``Online Application for the Data Portal (SAMHDA).'' This
online data portal was established in 2013 to more efficiently make
restricted datasets from SAMHSA available to designated, approved
researchers. The Data Portal and all applications are maintained
through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Data Archive (SAMHDA).
Currently, data from the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN), DAWN
Medical Examiner/Coroner component, National Survey on Drug Use and
Health (NSDUH), and NSDUH Adult Clinical Interview data are available
through the portal. Data recipients must complete a web-based
application process and receive project approval from SAMHSA's Center
for Behavioral Health and Statistics and Quality (CBHSQ), and can use
the datasets for statistical purposes only. No fees are charged for the
datasets. The online portal supports SAMHSA's mission to make substance
use and mental disorder information and research more accessible.
Note that this system of records does not include:
Records about requesters who seek unrestricted datasets,
publications, or other information products from an HHS on-line or
paper-based ordering and delivery system. Unrestricted materials are
also proactively made available to the public by HHS, but are released
without restrictions (though some may be subject to terms or conditions
of use and require registration for an account and payment of a fee).
Because the requests or order forms collect minimal information about
the requester (i.e., the requester's name, mailing address or email
address, telephone number, or other contact or delivery information,
and payment information if a fee is imposed) they would be adequately
covered by other SORNs (for example, ``Correspondence Tracking
Management System (CTMS)'' SORN #09-70-3005; ``Consumer Mailing List''
SORN #09-90-0041; and ``Unified Financial Management System (UFMS)''
SORN #09-90-0024 if a fee is involved), if a SORN is required (i.e., if
the records are retrieved directly by an individual requester's name or
other personal identifier). Examples include records about requesters
who order materials online from AHRQ's Publications Online Store &
Clearinghouse or by mail from AHRQ's Publications Clearinghouse, which
provide only unrestricted publications and other information products;
and records about requesters ordering unrestricted datasets from CMS's
current DADSS system and its successor, which processes orders for both
restricted and unrestricted datasets.
Records about data requesters that are not retrieved
directly by an individual requester's name or other personal
identifier. These records are not subject to the Privacy Act and are
not required to be covered in a SORN, even when they are associated
with a restricted dataset and include additional information about the
requester (such as, the requester's intended research purpose,
qualifications, signed Data Use Agreement, and confidentiality training
certificate). An example would be requester records that are retrieved
first by a dataset name and/or a requesting entity's name, and then by
an individual researcher's or record custodian's name.
The Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) governs the means by which the U.S.
Government collects, maintains, and uses information about individuals
in a system of records. A ``system of records'' is a group of any
records under the control of a federal agency from which information
about an individual is retrieved by the individual's name or other
personal identifier. The Privacy Act requires each agency to publish in
the Federal Register a system of records notice (SORN) identifying and
describing each system of records the agency maintains, including the
purposes for which the agency uses information about individuals in the
system, the routine uses for which the agency discloses such
information outside the agency, and how individual record subjects can
exercise their rights under the Privacy Act.
A report on the proposed new system of records has been sent to OMB
and Congress in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(r).
SYSTEM NUMBER:
09-90-1401
SYSTEM NAME:
Records About Restricted Dataset Requesters
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Unclassified
SYSTEM LOCATIONS:
Electronic files are maintained at the following server locations:
AHRQ: Social & Scientific Systems Data Center, Ashburn,
Virginia
CMS: CMS Data Center, Baltimore, Maryland
SAMHSA: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Data Archive,
Rockville, Maryland
Hard-copy files are maintained at the System Manager locations; see
``System Manager(s)'' section below.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM:
Individuals within and outside HHS who request restricted datasets
and software products that HHS makes proactively available to qualified
members of the public, usually for health-related scientific research
and study purposes. Examples include individual researchers and records
custodians, project officers, or other representatives of entities such
as universities, government agencies, and research organizations.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
Categories of records include:
1. Request records, containing the requester's name and contact
information (telephone number, mailing address, email address),
affiliated entity (e.g., if making the request as a records custodian
or other employee), and a description of the dataset requested.
2. Order fulfillment records, containing user registration
information such as email address and IP address (if the requester is
provided access to the dataset electronically through a public access
web portal or link) or mailing information (if the dataset is mailed to
the requester on a disk or other media), and tracking information
(providing proof of delivery).
[[Page 17449]]
3. Data use restriction records, containing the requester's
identification, contact, and affiliated entity information,
qualifications, intended use of the data (e.g., study name, contract
number), confidentiality training documentation (e.g., a coded number
indicating the individual completed required confidentiality training),
signed and notarized data use agreement documents (e.g., Affidavit of
Nondisclosure; Declaration of Nondisclosure; Confidential Data Use and
Nondisclosure Agreement (CDUNA); Individual Designations of Agent; DUA
number and expiration date), tracking information, and any on-site
inspection information.
4. Payment records (if a fee is charged), consisting of the
requester's credit card account name, number, and billing address, or
bank routing number and checking account name, address, and number.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
AHRQ: 42 U.S.C. 299-299a; 42 U.S.C. 299c-2
CMS: 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(10); 45 CFR 164.514(e); 44 U.S.C. 3544; 42
U.S.C. 1306
SAMHDA: 42 U.S.C. 290aa(d)(1); 44 U.S.C. 3501(8)
See also: CIPSEA, codified at 44 U.S.C. 3501 note.
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
The purposes of this system of records is to provide restricted
datasets and software products to qualified data requesters in a timely
and efficient manner and consistent with applicable laws, and to enable
HHS to enforce data requesters' compliance with use and security
restrictions that apply to the data. Relevant HHS personnel use the
records on a need-to-know basis for those purposes; specifically:
Contact and user registration information is used to
communicate with the requester, enable the requester to access
requested data electronically (for example, the requester's email
address would be used to register the requester to use a public access
web portal or link, and to notify the requester when data has been
delivered electronically to his registered account), locate the
requester (e.g., for on-site inspections or to otherwise check
compliance with the data use agreement), and deliver and track data
provided by mail (e.g., to document receipt for enforcement purposes
and report lost shipments to security personnel).
Qualifications, planned use of the data, confidentiality
training information, signed data use agreement, data receipt
information, on-site inspection information, and information about data
breaches or contract violations is used to grant the request
(consistent with data use restrictions) or deny the request, bind the
requester to the applicable data use restrictions and other security
requirements, conduct on-site inspections or otherwise check the
requester's compliance with the data use agreement, enforce the
agreement if breached, and share information about data breaches and
contract violations with other HHS components administering restricted
dataset requests involving the same requesters.
Payment information is used to collect any applicable fee.
Any payment information shared with HHS accounting and debt collection
systems is also covered under the accounting and debt collection
systems' SORNs and is subject to the routine uses published in those
SORNs (see, e.g., United Financial Management System, SORN #09-90-0024;
and Debt Management and Collection System, SORN #09-40-0012).
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES
OF USERS AND THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
Information about an individual data requester may be disclosed to
parties outside HHS without the individual's prior, written consent
pursuant to the following routine uses:
1. Disclosures may be made to federal agencies and Department
contractors that have been engaged by HHS to assist in accomplishment
of an HHS function relating to the purposes of this system of records
and that have a need to have access to the records in order to assist
HHS in performing the activity. Any contractor will be required to
comply with the requirements of the Privacy Act.
2. Records may be disclosed to student volunteers, individuals
working under a personal services contract, and other individuals
performing functions relating to the purposes of this system of records
for the Department but technically not having the status of agency
employees, if they need access to the records in order to perform their
assigned agency functions.
3. CMS records may be disclosed to a CMS contractor (including but
not limited to Medicare Administrative Contractors, fiscal
intermediaries, and carriers) that assists in the administration of a
CMS-administered health benefits program, or to a grantee of a CMS-
administered grant program, when disclosure is deemed reasonably
necessary by CMS to prevent, deter, discover, detect, investigate,
examine, prosecute, sue with respect to, defend against, correct,
remedy, or otherwise combat fraud, waste, or abuse in such program.
4. Records may be disclosed to another federal agency or an
instrumentality of any governmental jurisdiction within or under the
control of the United States (including any state or local governmental
agency) that administers federally funded programs, or that has the
authority to investigate, potential fraud, waste or abuse in federally
funded programs, when disclosure is deemed reasonably necessary by HHS
to prevent, deter, discover, detect, investigate, examine, prosecute,
sue with respect to, defend against, correct, remedy or otherwise
combat fraud, waste or abuse in such programs.
5. When a record on its face, or in conjunction with other records,
indicates a violation or potential violation of law, whether civil,
criminal or regulatory in nature, and whether arising by general
statute or particular program statute, or by regulation, rule, or order
issued pursuant thereto, disclosure may be made to the appropriate
public authority, whether federal, foreign, state, local, tribal, or
otherwise, responsible for enforcing, investigating or prosecuting the
violation or charged with enforcing or implementing the statute, rule,
regulation, or order issued pursuant thereto, if the information
disclosed is relevant to the enforcement, regulatory, investigative, or
prosecutorial responsibility of the receiving entity.
6. Information may be disclosed to the U.S. Department of Justice
(DOJ) or to a court or other tribunal, when:
a. The agency or any component thereof, or
b. any employee of the agency in his or her official capacity, or
c. any employee of the agency in his or her individual capacity
where DOJ has agreed to represent the employee, or
d. the United States Government, is a party to litigation or has an
interest in such litigation and, by careful review, HHS determines that
the records are both relevant and necessary to the litigation and that,
therefore, the use of such records by the DOJ, court or other tribunal
is deemed by HHS to be compatible with the purpose for which the agency
collected the records.
7. Records may be disclosed to a federal, foreign, state, local,
tribal, or other public authority of the fact that this system of
records contains information relevant to the hiring or retention of an
employee, the retention of a security clearance, the letting of a
contract, or the issuance or retention of
[[Page 17450]]
a license, grant or other benefit. The other agency or licensing
organization may then make a request supported by the written consent
of the individual for further information if it so chooses. HHS will
not make an initial disclosure unless the information has been
determined to be sufficiently reliable to support a referral to another
office within the agency or to another federal agency for criminal,
civil, administrative, personnel, or regulatory action.
8. Information may be disclosed to a Member of Congress or
Congressional staff member in response to a written inquiry of the
Congressional office made at the written request of the constituent
about whom the record is maintained. The Congressional office does not
have any greater authority to obtain records than the individual would
have if requesting the records directly.
9. Records may be disclosed to the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) if captured in an intrusion detection system used by HHS
and DHS pursuant to a DHS cybersecurity program that monitors Internet
traffic to and from federal government computer networks to prevent a
variety of types of cybersecurity incidents.
10. Disclosures may be made to appropriate federal agencies and
Department contractors that have a need to know the information for the
purpose of assisting the Department's efforts to respond to a suspected
or confirmed breach of the security or confidentiality of information
maintained in this system of records, when the information disclosed is
relevant and necessary to that assistance.
Information about an individual data requester may also be
disclosed from this system of records to parties outside HHS without
the individual's consent for any of the uses authorized directly in the
Privacy Act at 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(2) and (b)(4)-(11).
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORING, RETRIEVING, ACCESSING, RETAINING,
AND DISPOSING OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM--
STORAGE:
Records are stored in electronic databases and hard-copy files.
DADSS, and its successors', records may also be stored on portable
media.
RETRIEVABILITY:
Records are retrieved by the data requester's name, registrant/user
name, User ID number, or data use agreement (DUA) number.
SAFEGUARDS:
Records are safeguarded in accordance with applicable laws, rules
and policies, including the HHS Information Technology Security Program
Handbook, all pertinent National Institutes of Standards and Technology
(NIST) publications, and OMB Circular A-130, Management of Federal
Resources. Records are protected from unauthorized access through
appropriate administrative, physical, and technical safeguards.
Safeguards conform to the HHS Information Security and Privacy Program,
https://www.hhs.gov/ocio/securityprivacy/. The safeguards include
protecting the facilities where records are stored or accessed with
security guards, badges and cameras, securing hard-copy records in
locked file cabinets, file rooms or offices during off-duty hours,
limiting access to electronic databases to authorized users based on
roles and the principle of least privilege, and two-factor
authentication (user ID and password), using a secured operating system
protected by encryption, firewalls, and intrusion detection systems,
using an SSL connection for secure encrypted transmissions, requiring
encryption for records stored on removable media, and training
personnel in Privacy Act and information security requirements.
RETENTION AND DISPOSAL:
Records needed to enforce data use restrictions are retained for 20
years by AHRQ (see DAA-0510-2013-0003-0001) and 5 years by CMS (see N1-
440-10-04) after the agreement is closed, and may be kept longer if
necessary for enforcement, audit, legal, or other purposes. The
equivalent SAMHSA records will be retained indefinitely until a
disposition schedule is approved by the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). SAMHSA anticipates proposing a 5 year retention
period to NARA. Records of payments made electronically are transmitted
securely to a Payment Card Industry-compliant payment gateway for
processing and are not stored. Records of payments made by check,
purchase order, or wire transfer are disposed of once the funds have
been received.
Records are disposed of using destruction methods prescribed by
NIST SP 800-88.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS(ES):
AHRQ: HCUP Project Officer, Center for Delivery,
Organization, and Markets, 540 Gaither Road, Rockville, MD 20850;
Telephone: 301-427-1410; HCUP@AHRQ.GOV.
CMS: DADSS and its successor, Division of Data and
Information Dissemination, Data Development and Services Group, Office
of Enterprise Data and Analytics, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, 7500 Security Boulevard, Mailstop: B2-29-04, Office Location:
B2-03-37, Baltimore, MD 21244-1870.
SAMHSA: SAMHDA Project Officer, CBHSQ, 1 Choke Cherry
Road, Rockville, MD 20857.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURE:
An individual who wishes to know if this system of records contains
records about him or her should submit a written request to the
relevant System Manager at the address indicated above. The individual
must verify his or her identity by providing either a notarized request
or a written certification that the requester is who he or she claims
to be and understands that the knowing and willful request for
acquisition of a record pertaining to an individual under false
pretenses is a criminal offense under the Privacy Act, subject to a
five thousand dollar fine.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURE:
Same as notification procedure.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
An individual seeking to amend the content of information about him
or her in this system should contact the relevant System Manager and
reasonably identify the record, specify the information contested,
state the corrective action sought, and provide the reasons for the
amendment, with supporting justification.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Information in this system of records is obtained directly from the
individual data requester to whom it applies, or is derived from
information supplied by the individual or provided by HHS officials.
EXEMPTIONS CLAIMED FOR THIS SYSTEM:
None.
Celeste Dade-Vinson,
Health Insurance Specialist, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2015-07444 Filed 3-31-15; 8:45 a.m.]
BILLING CODE 4120-03-P