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Setting sail on a new IT agenda

April 12, 2001, 11:11 AM —  InfoWorld — 

RATHER THAN A Bush revolution on IT policy, the new White House will more likely forge ahead on major Bill Clinton initiatives while simultaneously waging a quiet, pro-corporate war on the details of those objectives.

"If you look at what [George W.] Bush did as chief executive of Texas, he is very pro-business. And like a lot of Republicans, he tends to want to set high-level guidelines and maximize the flexibility for business to achieve those guidelines," says Tim Klein, an analyst at Gartner in Stamford, Conn.

But instead of hurrying off in a new direction on technology policy issues, the Bush administration has spent its early days methodically combing through the details of new privacy laws and other measures kicked off during the Clinton years.

At the same time, Bush, together with the majority Republican Congress, did overturn sweeping workplace ergonomics standards earlier this month. Bush may also unravel some of the former president's medical privacy push (see related article, below) and perhaps other IT initiatives considered burdensome to business.

New scrutiny prescribed for Clinton-backed health care privacy rules

Powerful lawmaker and House Majority Leader Dick Armey recently sent a shot across the bow on pending medical records privacy regulations, warning the Bush administration that it may well be "prudent to look before we leap."


Armey pointed out that health care providers would have to submit personal patient data to the federal government under proposed rules crafted around the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).


"A 'Trust me, I'm from the government' approach won't wash," wrote Armey in a March letter.


Raising the specter of government access to private health care data adds another worrisome layer to the complicated and heated issue of mandated guidelines for protecting medical records.


Armey's missive arrives just as Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson is sorting through HIPAA backlash from health care providers.


"There is already a delay on the rules, and Armey may be looking for further delay in implementation," says Mark Uncapher, a lawyer with Arlington, Va.-based Information Technology Association of America (ITAA).


Under former President Clinton's HIPAA rules, health care providers would be required to operate under principles for minimal disclosure of personal data. Among other requirements, providers would have to issue notices of privacy practices and offer patients the chance to review and amend their own data. The requirements would also touch third parties such as health care consulting firms, which would not be allowed to do business with health care providers that are not in compliance with the rules.


Outcry to HIPAA in the medical community sometimes borders on the extreme, sources say.


"I think they are just running scared," says Tim Klein, an analyst at Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner. "Many health care providers are now running so close to the edge financially that any kind of expenditure is a

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