NEW YORK — A year ago, U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he wanted to rebuild trust in federal health agencies, and vowed to employ ''radical transparency'' to do it.
But many types of health information that steadily flowed from the government for years or decades has been delayed, deleted and in some cases stopped all together.
The collection and sharing of information was hurt by sweeping layoffs at federal agencies and the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. Officials took down health agency websites to comply with an executive order from President Donald Trump, causing outside researchers to archive federal health datasets and leading to a lawsuit that ended with a judge ordering the websites' restoration.
Ariel Beccia, a researcher at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said changes in the flow of federal health information have made her angry.
''We pay taxes to hopefully have good, inclusive public health practice and data,'' said Beccia, who focuses on the health of LGBTQ youth. ''The past year it felt like every single day, something that I and my colleagues use daily in our work has just been taken away'' by federal officials.
Asked about now-unavailable data and information, a spokesman for Kennedy said the premise of The Associated Press' inquiry was flawed and relied on selective and inaccurate characterizations.
''Secretary Kennedy is leading the most transparent HHS in history, with unprecedented disclosure and openness aimed at restoring public trust in federal health agencies,'' said the spokesman, Andrew Nixon.
He pointed to an HHS webpage on the agency's transparency efforts, which includes a list of canceled government contracts and the repackaging of previously available information — including a U.S. Food and Drug Administration ''chemical contaminants transparency tool.''