Standifer v. Ohio Dept. of Health

2022 Ohio 4129
CourtOhio Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 31, 2022
Docket2022-00217PQ
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 Ohio 4129 (Standifer v. Ohio Dept. of Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standifer v. Ohio Dept. of Health, 2022 Ohio 4129 (Ohio Super. Ct. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as Standifer v. Ohio Dept. of Health, 2022-Ohio-4129.]

IN THE COURT OF CLAIMS OF OHIO

LAUREN (CID) STANDIFER Case No. 2022-00217PQ

Requester Special Master Jeff Clark

v. ORDER

OHIO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Respondent

{¶1} On October 6, 2022, respondent Ohio Department of Health (ODH) filed a “Request to Seal Document Titled ‘Copy of 2012[sic]-2016 Unintentional Drug ODDisSell.’” This document had been filed by requester Laura Standifer as an attachment to her reply pleading. The motion is DENIED for the reasons that follow. Background {¶2} On August 24, 2021, Lauren Standifer, a freelance data journalist, made a public records request to ODH for a copy of “the death certificate master file from 2020, including all data fields.” (Complaint at 4.) On September 23, 2021, ODH provided a responsive file of “vital statistics data” (Id. at 7) but withheld a number of death data fields on the assertion that they contain “protected health information” pursuant to R.C. 3701.17. (Id. at 8.) Standifer asked ODH to explain how they could deny her request now, when they had released the same data in the past: [I]n 2017, the Ohio Department of Health provided the Cleveland Plain Dealer with all the fields I have requested, including detailed information about cause of death, for all individuals who died in Ohio of opioid overdoses between 2010 and 2016 (available here). Can you explain why the department did not consider these fields protected health information in 2017, but does now? Did the department violate health privacy laws in 2017? (Id. at 6 – Standifer to Priddle email of 9-24-21.) In addition to the 2010-2016 file of individuals who died of opioid overdoses, Standifer reminded ODH that it “has provided the full, un-redacted [death certificate master] file in the past to myself and The Plain Case No. 2022-00217PQ -2- ORDER

Dealer when I worked there.” (Id. at 2-3, 7.) ODH declined to explain the change to its past practice of disclosing the full, unredacted file. (Id. at 8-9.) {¶3} Standifer then filed a complaint with this court alleging denial of access to public records in violation of R.C. 149.43(B) and attached a copy of the 2020 death data printout she had received in response to her request, showing how few data fields had been provided to her. ODH filed a response asserting, inter alia, that the withheld data fields are protected health information ODH is forbidden to disclose under R.C. 3701.17. (Response at 10-12.) Motion to Seal {¶4} On August 25, 2022, the Special Master issued an order directing Standifer to file a reply including “a copy of the 2010 to 2016 opioid death data report referenced in the Standifer to Priddle email of 9-24-21” to evidence for the court’s review the additional death data fields ODH had provided in 2017. Standifer filed her reply with a copy of the opioid death data report on October 6, 2022 and ODH filed its request to seal later the same day. The request argued as follows: The Ohio Department of Health maintains that the information contained in the document is protected health information as that term is defined in R.C. 3701.17. Publication in this manner does not qualify as one of the exceptions to R.C. 3701.17 and therefore, the document should not be made publicly available under these circumstances. The confidentiality of the information in the document is a contested issue in this case and the document should be subjected to in camera inspection rather than made public. Out of an abundance of caution, the Special Master ordered the clerk to temporarily lock the attachment, and directed ODH to file any additional support for its claim that R.C. 3701.17: 1. prevents any private individual legally in possession of the document from disclosing any or all of its content, and/or 2. prevents this court from accepting the document for open filing by a private individual legally in possession of the document. (Oct. 7, 2022 Order.) Waiver Case No. 2022-00217PQ -3- ORDER

{¶5} ODH’s release of the document to the Cleveland Plain Dealer in 20171 constituted the voluntary relinquishment of any public records exemption that might have applied to the document and the data therein. State ex rel. Ohio Republican Party v. Fitzgerald, 145 Ohio St.3d 92, 2015-Ohio-5056, 47 N.E.3d 124, ¶ 29 (“Release of [security record] data to the press also precludes the assertion that the data are excepted from disclosure pursuant to the public-records law.”); Shaffer v. Budish at ¶ 19. (previous disclosure to the media of jail interior images waives claim to exemption as “infrastructure records”). Although ODH’s previous waivers do not preclude the office from applying any valid defense in the future, Bollinger v. River Valley Local Sch. Dist., Ct. of Cl. No. 2020- 00368PQ, 2020-Ohio-6637, ¶ 7, ODH is not entitled to “do-overs” of its previous years of voluntary releases of death file data.2 {¶6} Following its waiver, ODH concedes that Standifer as a private individual may freely publish, file in court, and otherwise disseminate her copy of the document because R.C. 3701.17(B) does not direct her behavior. (Oct. 18, 2022 Resp. to Order at 2.) See also Shaffer v. Budish, Ct. of Cl. No. 2017-00690PQ, 2018-Ohio-1539, ¶ 38-40. ODH states only that it “would prefer that it not be published” because its release is likely to harm the families and friends of the individuals listed in the report. Public availability of sensitive protected health information may carry far reaching consequences and is possibly psychologically or emotionally detrimental to the decedents’ survivors and the decedents’ legacies. (Oct. 18, 2022 Resp. to Order at 3.) ODH offers no evidence in support of this bare assertion of potential harm, or even its plausibility in light of the ready public availability of cause of death and other individual data from other sources. {¶7} In response, Standifer asserts that attempting to seal the 2010-2016 death data as filed in this case would be inappropriate and futile, both legally and practically: By providing this data in response to a public records request, the department demonstrated it did not consider this data protected health information. Further, this data has already been used in media reporting, namely “Ohio construction workers seven times more likely to die of an

1 Respondent’s Oct. 7, 2022 Response to Order, Exh. A - Priddle Aff., ¶ 5.c. and 5.c.iii. 2 Prior, at the earliest, to “the 2019 ODH/VS reassessing of the scope of R.C. 3701.17.” Respondent’s Oct. 7, 2022 Response to Order, Exh. A - Priddle Aff., ¶ 5.c.iii. Case No. 2022-00217PQ -4- ORDER

opioid overdose in 2016” published Nov. 5, 2017. Subsequent to The Plain Dealer’s publication of this story, the data was shared with multiple scholars and health experts whose work addresses the opioid crisis. This data was also uploaded to the data-sharing website data.world where it could be accessed by other staff at The Plain Dealer and partner news organizations. I will continue to share this data with any other parties I believe are committed to understanding and combating the overdose crisis, which continues to claim Ohioans’ lives at an increasing rate. This information is thus already in the public domain, and sealing it in this case would be a meaningless gesture. Further, it is nonsensical for the respondents to claim this information should be sealed in its aggregate form when public records law explicitly states that the public has the right to examine individual death records containing all the information included in this filing. The Ohio Department of Health has suggested the respondent [sic] request death data not from ODH, which claims it has no responsibility to generate a report of the requested death data, but from each individual county coroner’s office.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn
420 U.S. 469 (Supreme Court, 1975)
Lambert v. Hartman
517 F.3d 433 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
Kallstrom v. City of Columbus
165 F. Supp. 2d 686 (S.D. Ohio, 2001)
Dissell v. Cleveland
2018 Ohio 5444 (Ohio Court of Claims, 2018)
State ex rel. James v. Ohio State University
637 N.E.2d 911 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1994)
State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Hamilton County
662 N.E.2d 334 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1996)
State ex rel. Strothers v. Wertheim
684 N.E.2d 1239 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1997)
State ex rel. WBNS TV, Inc. v. Dues
101 Ohio St. 3d 406 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2004)
State ex rel. James v. Ohio State Univ.
1994 Ohio 246 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1994)
State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Hamilton Cty.
1996 Ohio 214 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 Ohio 4129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standifer-v-ohio-dept-of-health-ohioctcl-2022.