2026年4月21日 / 美国东部时间凌晨5:00 / KFF健康新闻
作者:阿曼达·赛茨、迈亚·罗森菲尔德
民主党议员要求特朗普政府停止收集数百万联邦工作人员、退休人员及其家属的敏感医疗记录的计划。
美国人事管理办公室已要求65家保险公司每月提交报告,提供超过800万名参加联邦医保计划人员的详细医疗和药品索赔数据,KFF健康新闻本月早些时候曾对此进行报道。这一可能大幅扩大人事管理办公室可获取的可识别个人医疗信息的请求,引发了医疗伦理学家、保险公司高管和隐私维权人士的警觉。
如今,人事管理办公室主任斯科特·库珀的办公桌上多了两封来信:一封由16名美国参议员联名签署,另一封由众议院监督委员会最高民主党议员罗伯特·加西亚牵头,均要求该办公室放弃这项提案。
众议院民主党议员在4月17日写给库珀的信中援引KFF健康新闻的报道称:“收集涉及医疗护理和治疗的广泛可识别个人数据,引发了人们的担忧,即人事管理办公室可能会出于政治原因,将某些寻求至关重要医疗服务的联邦雇员作为目标,而这些服务是本届政府所不认同的。”
仅凭国会民主党议员的来信不太可能扭转人事管理办公室的计划。掌控国会并最终负责所有监督工作的共和党人尚未就人事管理办公室的通知发表意见。
人事管理办公室没有立即回应置评请求。该机构在通知中表示,将利用这些数据进行监督和管理联邦医保计划,但尚未公开回应针对该提案的书面担忧。
美国人事管理办公室主任斯科特·库珀于2026年3月25日出席众议院委员会听证会作证。马里亚姆·祖哈布 / 美联社
这份于12月发布并送达各保险公司的通知称,保险公司合法可向人事管理办公室披露“受保护的健康信息”,且未要求从索赔数据中删除姓名或诊断结果等可识别信息。
医疗政策专家本月早些时候告诉KFF健康新闻,这些数据可用于实施节约成本的措施。但这也将让已解雇数万名联邦工作人员的特朗普政府获取大量个人信息。
在信件中,民主党议员列出了人事管理办公室获取数百万联邦工作人员详细医疗索赔数据可能带来的诸多担忧。
由加州议员亚当·希夫和弗吉尼亚州议员马克·华纳牵头的参议院民主党议员在信中指出,人事管理办公室不具备保护此类敏感数据的能力,本届政府可能会像此前处理数百万医疗补助计划参保者的个人信息那样,将这些记录在各政府机构间共享。
他们还声称,该机构没有获取这些数据的合法权利,保险公司向人事管理办公室分享此类信息将“违反《健康保险流通与责任法案》的核心原则”。该法案要求维护可识别健康信息的特定机构,如医院和保险公司,在未经患者同意的情况下保护信息不被泄露。参议员们警告,这项提案会威胁到患者与临床医生之间的关系,尤其是“涉及心理健康、慢性病或其他高度个人化病症的敏感披露”。
“基于这些原因,我们强烈敦促你停止进一步考虑这项提案,”这封于4月19日寄给库珀的信中写道。
美国联邦政府雇员联合会——联邦雇员规模最大的工会——对KFF健康新闻的报道表示警觉。该联合会全国主席埃弗雷特·凯利在一份声明中指出,人事管理办公室的提案“正值针对联邦雇员的协同攻击以及政府机构间共享敏感个人数据的法律边界一再被突破的背景下”。
“本届政府打算如何处理800万美国人最私密的健康信息,这个问题并非学术讨论,”美国联邦政府雇员联合会的声明写道,“这十分紧迫。”
凯利在一份电子邮件声明中对国会的来信表示赞赏。
“我们很高兴国会的民主党议员和我们一样,对本届政府公然企图侵犯全美数百万民众隐私的行为感到愤怒,”凯利写道,“我们认同他们对该信息可能被滥用、继续非法 targeting 雇员的担忧,以及他们要求人事管理办公室撤回这项提案的呼吁。”
KFF健康新闻是一家专注卫生议题深度报道的全国性新闻编辑部,也是KFF的核心运营项目之一——KFF是独立的卫生政策研究、民意调查和新闻资讯来源。
Democrats demand Trump administration halt plan to collect federal workers’ health data
April 21, 2026 / 5:00 AM EDT / KFF Health News
By Amanda Seitz, Maia Rosenfeld
Democratic lawmakers are demanding that the Trump administration halt plans to collect sensitive medical records for millions of federal workers and retirees, as well as their family members.
The Office of Personnel Management has asked 65 insurance companies to provide monthly reports with detailed medical and pharmaceutical claims data of more than 8 million people enrolled in federal health plans, KFF Health News reported earlier this month. The request, which could dramatically expand the personally identifiable medical information OPM can access, alarmed health ethicists, insurance company executives, and privacy advocates.
Now, OPM Director Scott Kupor has two letters on his desk — one from 16 U.S. senators and another led by Rep. Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee — asking him to drop the agency’s proposal.
“The collection of broad, personally identifiable data regarding medical care and treatment raises concerns that OPM could target certain federal employees seeking vital health care services that the Administration disagrees with on political grounds,” the Democratic House members wrote to Kupor April 17, citing KFF Health News.
The letters from congressional Democrats alone are unlikely to reverse OPM’s plans. Republicans — who control Congress and, ultimately, any oversight activities — have not weighed in on OPM’s notice.
OPM did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the letters. The agency, which said in its notice that it will use the data for oversight and to manage the federal health plans, has not publicly addressed written concerns about its proposal.
Scott Kupor, director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, testifies during a House committee hearing on March 25, 2026. Mariam Zuhaib / AP
The notice, posted and sent to insurers in December, states that insurers are legally permitted to disclose “protected health information” to OPM and does not provide instructions to redact identifying information, such as names or diagnoses, from the claims.
That data could be used to implement cost-saving measures, health policy experts told KFF Health News earlier this month. But it would also give the Trump administration — which has laid off or fired tens of thousands of federal workers — access to a vast trove of personal information.
In the letters, Democratic lawmakers lay out a number of concerns about potential consequences of OPM’s obtaining detailed medical claims for millions of federal workers.
The letter from Senate Democrats — led by Adam Schiff of California and Mark Warner of Virginia — argues that OPM is not equipped to safeguard such sensitive data and that the administration could share the records across government agencies, as it has done with personal information on millions of Medicaid enrollees.
They also assert that the agency does not have a legal right to the data and that insurers’ sharing the information with OPM would “violate the core principles of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.” HIPAA requires certain organizations that maintain identifiable health information — such as hospitals and insurers — to protect it from being disclosed without patient consent. The proposal, the senators warn, threatens patients’ relationships with their clinicians, especially “sensitive disclosures regarding mental health, chronic illness, or other deeply personal conditions.”
“For these reasons, we strongly urge you to cease any further consideration of this proposal,” states the letter, which was sent to Kupor on April 19.
The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest union for federal employees, responded with alarm to KFF Health News’ reporting. The union noted in a statement from its national president, Everett Kelley, that OPM’s proposal “comes in the context of coordinated attacks on federal employees and repeated stretching of the legal boundaries for sharing sensitive personal data across government agencies.
“The question of what this administration intends to do with eight million Americans’ most private health information is not academic,” the AFGE statement read. “It is urgent.”
In an emailed statement, Kelley applauded the congressional letters.
“We are pleased that Democratic lawmakers on the Hill are just as outraged as we are over this administration’s blatant attempt to breach the privacy of millions of Americans across the country,” Kelley wrote. “We share their concerns regarding potential misuse of the information to continue illegally targeting workers and their demand for OPM to withdraw this proposal.”
_KFF Health News_is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at_KFF_— the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism._
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