[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 202 (Friday, October 20, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 72481-72486]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-23147]


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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

Administration for Children and Families


Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records

AGENCY: Administration for Children and Families, Department of Health 
and Human Services.

ACTION: Notice of a modified system of records.

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SUMMARY: In accordance with the requirements of the Privacy Act of 
1974, as amended, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is 
altering an existing department wide system of records, ``Records About 
Restricted Dataset Requesters,'' System Number 09-90-1401, to add 
records maintained by HHS' Administration for Children and Families 
(ACF) and to make other changes, including changing the system of 
records name to ``Records About Requesters of Restricted Datasets.'' 
This system of records covers 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.

DATES: In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(4) and (11), this modified 
system of records is effective October 20, 2023, subject to a 30-day 
comment period on the revised routine use described below. Please 
submit any comments by November 20, 2023.

ADDRESSES: The public should submit written comments, by mail or email, 
to Anita Alford, Senior Official for Privacy, Administration for 
Children and Families, 330 C Street SW, Washington, DC 20201, or 
[email protected].

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: General questions about the system of 
records should be submitted by mail or email to Beth Kramer, HHS 
Privacy Act Officer, at 200 Independence Ave. SW--Suite 729H, 
Washington, DC 20201, or [email protected], or (202) 690-6941.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This departmentwide system of records covers 
records about individuals within and outside HHS who request restricted 
datasets and software products from HHS, when HHS maintains the 
requester records in a record system they are retrieved directly by an 
individual requester's name or other personal identifier. It currently 
includes records maintained by four HHS Operating Divisions. It is 
being revised to add records maintained by a fifth Operating Division, 
the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), and to make other 
changes, as explained below:
     The system of records name has been changed to ``Records 
About Requesters of Restricted Datasets.''
     The alterations made to add ACF's records affect the 
System Location, System Manager(s), Authorities, Categories of Records, 
and Retention sections of the System of Records Notice (SORN).
     Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and 
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) 
System Manager information has been updated.
     In the Categories of Records section, additional examples 
of records (license application, data protection plan, and 
Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval records) have been added.
     Routine use 6, authorizes disclosures to the U.S. 
Department of Justice (DOJ) or a court in litigation, has been revised 
to change ``litigation'' to ``litigation or other proceedings'' and to 
remove wording that required the disclosures to be compatible with the 
purpose the original disclosed information was collected, which is 
redundant because it repeats part of the definition of a routine use.
     The sections specifying procedures for making access, 
amendment, and notification requests have been revised to reference 
HHS' Privacy Act regulations in 45 CFR; to state that the requests must 
contain the requester's full name, address, date of birth, and 
signature; and to require identity verification in the Contesting 
Records Procedures section and state that the right to contest records 
is limited to information that is factually inaccurate, incomplete, 
irrelevant, or untimely (obsolete).
    ``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; or because 
they contain other types of data that require confidentiality 
protection (for example, proprietary business data submitted to HHS 
with restrictions imposed by the submitting entity). The datasets and 
products are

[[Page 72482]]

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, or to protect proprietary business interests or 
other interests needing confidentiality protection. 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 or to reveal proprietary data or other protected 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.
    The modified system of records will cover records in the following 
five information technology (IT) systems, or any successor IT systems, 
about requesters of restricted datasets:
     Administration for Children & Families, Children's Bureau 
(ACF/CB) ``National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect (NDACAN).'' 
NDACAN is a data repository maintained by a contractor funded by ACF's 
Children's Bureau, containing deidentified child abuse and neglect data 
from national surveys, large-scale longitudinal surveys, state 
administrative data, and data collected by individual investigators. 
NDACAN delivers distributable datasets to researchers who apply for and 
receive a license. No distributable datasets contain information that 
is directly identifying; however, some are restricted because they have 
the potential to identify particular individuals if combined with other 
data, and thus require researchers to not only obtain a license but 
also submit a data protection plan and obtain Institutional Review 
Board (IRB) approval to receive the dataset. Records about researcher-
applicants who seek restricted datasets (including the license 
application, data protection plan, and IRB approval records) are 
retrieved by the researcher-applicant's name or other personal 
identifier, so are Privacy Act records. (NDACAN also collects 
identifiable customer information about researchers who seek 
unrestricted datasets, in order to deliver its products and services to 
them; however, because minimal information is collected about them, it 
would be covered by system of records 09-90-1901 if it is retrieved by 
personal identifier; see the below ``Note.'')
     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 Use 
Agreement (DUA) tracking system. This system tracks disclosures of data 
containing Protected Health Information (PHI) or Personally 
Identifiable Information (PII), including authorization, payment 
status, and shipping status of data extracts, between CMS, its 
contractors, and other authorized entities.
     National Institutes of Health (NIH) ``Controlled Data 
Access Systems.'' NIH supports ``NIH-designated data repositories'' 
that archive and distribute controlled-access, de-identified human data 
and results from scientific studies under the NIH Genomic Data Sharing 
Policy. Controlled-access data in NIH-designated data repositories are 
made available for secondary research only after investigators have 
obtained approval from NIH to use the requested data for a particular 
project. The National Center for Biotechnology Information database of 
Genotypes and Phenotypes (dbGaP) serves as a central portal to submit, 
locate, and request access to controlled-access, human genomic (e.g., 
GWAS, sequencing, expression, epigenomic) data. The dbGaP's capacity 
and functionality are extended by repositories managed by public or 
private organizations through structured partnerships (``trusted 
partnerships'') established by NIH through a contract mechanism. 
Information about investigators, Institutional Signing Officials, and 
other users of NIH-designated controlled access repositories may be 
located and viewed by approved staff using the dbGaP or trusted 
partner-managed systems. Sharing research data supports the mission of 
the NIH and is essential to facilitate the translation of research 
results into knowledge, products, and procedures that improve human 
health.
     Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration 
(SAMHSA) ``Online Application for the Data Portal (SAMHDA).'' This 
online data portal was established in 2013 to make restricted datasets 
from SAMHSA more efficiently 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 they 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: 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 they 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, 09-90-
1901, HHS Correspondence, Comment, Customer Service, and Contact List 
Records and 09-90-0024 HHS Financial Management System Records), 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

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information products; and records about requesters ordering 
unrestricted datasets from CMS's DUA tracking system 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 identifier and/or a requesting entity's name, and 
then by an individual researcher's or record custodian's name.
    A report on the modified system of records has been sent to OMB and 
Congress in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(r).

Rebecca Jones Gaston,
Commissioner, Administration on Children, Youth and Families.

SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER:
    Records About Requesters of Restricted Datasets, 09-90-1401.

SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
    Unclassified.

SYSTEM LOCATION:
    The address of each agency component responsible for the system of 
records is:
     ACF: Child Welfare Program Specialist, Children's Bureau, 
Administration for Children and Families, 330 C Street SW, Washington, 
DC 20201.
     AHRQ: HCUP Project Officer, Center for Delivery, 
Organization, and Markets, 540 Gaither Road, Rockville, MD 20850.
     CMS: DUA tracking system, Division of Data and Information 
Dissemination, Data Development and Services Group, Office of 
Enterprise Data and Analytics, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid 
Services, 7500 Security Blvd., Mailstop: B2-29-04, Office Location: B2-
03-37, Baltimore, MD 21244-1870.
     NIH: Office of the Director, Office of Science Policy, 
Division of Scientific Data Sharing Policy, 6705 Rockledge Drive--Suite 
750, Bethesda, MD 20817.
     SAMHSA: SAMHDA Project Officer, CBHSQ, 5600 Fishers Lane, 
Rockville, MD 20857.

SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
     ACF: Child Welfare Program Specialist, Children's Bureau, 
Administration for Children and Families, 330 C Street SW, Washington, 
DC 20201; Email: [email protected], or 202-205-8636.
     AHRQ: HCUP Project Officer, Center for Delivery, 
Organization, and Markets, 540 Gaither Road, Rockville, MD 20850; 
Telephone: 301-427-1410; [email protected].
     CMS: DUA tracking system, Office of Enterprise Data and 
Analytics, Data & Information Dissemination Group, Centers for Medicare 
& Medicaid Services, 7500 Security Blvd., Mailstop: B2-29-04, Office 
Location: B2-03-37, Baltimore, MD 21244-1870; 
[email protected].
     NIH: Office of the Director, Office of Science Policy, 
Division of Scientific Data Sharing Policy, 6705 Rockledge Drive--Suite 
750, Bethesda, MD 20817.
     SAMHSA: SAMHDA Project Officer, CBHSQ, 5600 Fishers Lane, 
Rockville, MD 20857; 877-726-4727. (``SAMHDA'' refers to Substance 
Abuse and Mental Health Data Archive.)

AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
    The following legal authorities authorize the collection and 
maintenance of these records:
     ACF: 42 U.S.C. 5101 et seq.; 45 CFR 1355.40 and 1356.80 
through 1356.86.
     AHRQ: 42 U.S.C. 299 through 299a and 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.
     NIH: 42 U.S.C. 217a, 241, 281, 282, and 284; 48 CFR subpt. 
15.3; E.O. 13478.
     SAMHDA: 42 U.S.C. 290aa(d)(l); 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 are 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., HHS Financial Management System Records, SORN #09-90-
0024; and Debt Management and Collection System, SORN #09-40-0012).
     Any of the above records could be used to evaluate 
accomplishment of HHS functions related to the purposes of this system 
of records and to evaluate performance of contractors utilized by HHS 
to accomplish those functions.

CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM:
    The records are about 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:
    The categories of records include:
     Request records, containing the requester's name and 
contact information (telephone number, mailing

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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.
     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).
     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., license 
application; affidavit of nondisclosure; declaration of nondisclosure; 
confidential data use and nondisclosure agreement (CDUNA); data 
protection plan; individual designations of agent; DUA number and 
expiration date; Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval records), 
tracking information, and any on-site inspection information.
     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.

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.

ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES 
OF USERS AND PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
    Information about an individual dataset requester may be disclosed 
to parties outside HHS, without that individual's consent, as provided 
in these 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 
(including ancillary functions, such as compiling reports and 
evaluating program effectiveness and contractor performance) 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 (including ancillary 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. For 
example, disclosure may be made to qualified experts not within the 
definition of HHS employees as prescribed in HHS regulations, for 
opinions as a part of the controlled data access process.
    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, in litigation or other 
proceedings, 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 the proceedings or 
has an interest in the proceedings and, by careful review, HHS 
determines that the records are both relevant and necessary to the 
proceedings.
    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 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 agencies, entities, and 
persons when (1) HHS suspects or has confirmed that there has been a 
breach of the system of records; (2) HHS has determined that as a 
result of the suspected or confirmed breach there is a risk of harm to 
individuals, HHS (including its information systems, programs, and 
operations), the federal

[[Page 72485]]

government, or national security; and (3) the disclosure made to such 
agencies, entities, and persons is reasonably necessary to assist in 
connection with HHS efforts to respond to the suspected or confirmed 
breach or to prevent, minimize, or remedy such harm.
    11. Disclosure may be made to another federal agency or federal 
entity, when HHS determines that information from this system of 
records is reasonably necessary to assist the recipient agency or 
entity in (1) responding to a suspected or confirmed breach or (2) 
preventing, minimizing, or remedying the risk of harm to individuals, 
the recipient agency or entity (including its information systems, 
programs, and operations), the federal government, or national 
security, resulting from a suspected or confirmed breach.
    12. Disclosure of past performance information pertaining to 
contractors engaged by HHS to assist in accomplishment of an HHS 
function relating to the purposes of this system of records may be made 
to a federal agency upon request and may include information about 
dataset requesters.
    13. NIH dataset requester records may be included in records 
disclosed to governmental or authorized non-governmental entities with 
a signed data access agreement for system data that includes records 
about individuals requesting and receiving restricted datasets, to use 
in compiling reports (such as, on the composition of biomedical and/or 
research workforce; authors of publications attributable to federally 
funded research; information made available through third-party systems 
as permitted by applicants or awardees for agency grants or contracts; 
or grant payment information reported to federal databases).
    14. When records about a requester of an NIH restricted dataset are 
related to an award or application for award under an NIH award 
program, the dataset requester records may be disclosed to the award 
applicant, principal investigator(s), institutional officials, trainees 
or others named in the application, or institutional service providers 
for purposes of application preparation, review, or award management, 
and to the public consistent with reporting and transparency standards 
and to the extent disclosure to the public would not cause an 
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
    15. HHS may disclose records from this system of records to the 
National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), General Services 
Administration (GSA), or other relevant federal agencies in connection 
with records management inspections conducted under the authority of 44 
U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
    Information about a dataset 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) through (11).

POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF RECORDS:
    Records are stored in electronic databases and hard-copy files. 
CMS' DUA tracking system records may also be stored on portable media.

POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF RECORDS:
    Records are retrieved by the data requester's name, registrant/user 
name, User ID Number, email address, or DUA number.

POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
    Records needed to enforce data use restrictions are retained for 20 
years by AHRQ (see DAA-0510-2013-0003-0001), 5 years by CMS (see Nl-
440-10-04), and 3 years by NIH (see DAA-0443-2013-0004-0004) after the 
agreement is closed, and may be kept longer if necessary for 
enforcement, audit, legal, or other purposes. The equivalent ACF and 
SAMHSA records will be retained indefinitely until a disposition 
schedule is approved by the National Archives and Records 
Administration (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.

ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL SAFEGUARDS:
    Records are safeguarded in accordance with applicable laws, rules, 
and policies, including HHS policies, pertinent National Institutes of 
Standards and Technology (NIST) publications, and OMB Circular A-130, 
Managing Information as a Strategic Resource. 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, 
and requiring encryption for records stored on removable media; and 
training personnel in Privacy Act and information security 
requirements.

RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
    An individual who wishes to access records about him or her in this 
system of records must submit a written access request to the relevant 
System Manager at the address indicated in the ``System Manager(s)'' 
section above, in accordance with the Department's Privacy Act 
implementation regulations in 45 CFR. The request must contain the 
requester's full name, address, date of birth, and signature. 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 fine of up to $5,000.

CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
    An individual seeking to correct a record about him or her in this 
system of records must submit a written correction request to the 
relevant System Manager at the address indicated in the ``System 
Manager(s)'' section above, in accordance with the Department's Privacy 
Act implementation regulations in 45 CFR. The request must contain the 
requester's full name, address, date of birth, and signature, 
reasonably identify the record, specify the information contested, and 
state the corrective action sought and the reasons for the correction. 
The request should include any supporting documentation. The individual 
must verify his or her identity in the same manner required for an 
access request. The right to contest records is limited to information 
that is factually inaccurate, incomplete, irrelevant, or untimely 
(obsolete).

[[Page 72486]]

NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
    An individual who wishes to know if this system of records contains 
a record about him or her must submit a written notification request to 
the relevant System Manager at the address indicated in the ``System 
Manager(s)'' section above, in accordance with the Department's Privacy 
Act implementation regulations in 45 CFR. The request must contain the 
requester's full name, address, date of birth, and signature. The 
individual must verify his or her identity in the same manner required 
for an access request.

EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
    None.

HISTORY:
    83 FR 11213 (Mar. 14, 2018).

[FR Doc. 2023-23147 Filed 10-19-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4184-29-P