Now Hiring (Again): ORI Leader Joins Secretary’s Office; Findings Plummet

In 2014, David E. Wright, then-director of the HHS Office of Research Integrity (ORI), was so fed up with various problems and what he called dysfunction at the HHS Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health (OASH) that he quit his job. Wright had been at the agency that investigates allegations of research misconduct in studies funded by Public Health Service agencies, including NIH, for just two years.

ORI’s findings of fabrication, falsification and plagiarism can mean a range of sanctions against investigators, including permanent debarment from federal programs. The agency can also require retractions of papers that include fraudulent data.

In something of a twist, last month Elisabeth Handley left ORI to join OASH as the PDASH—the principal deputy assistant secretary for health. Handley was ORI’s director after Kathryn Partin, Wright’s troubled successor. Handley leaves at a time when ORI employees are still teleworking and the agency has only issued one finding so far this year; it issued 10 last year.[1]

Handley’s departure also puts an end to a short period of stability among the four leadership positions in ORI and again means HHS will have to hang another vacancy sign. In the past, it has taken HHS several years to fill the top posts in this pivotal federal agency following departures. Handley was in the job permanently for just 15 months; she had previously served as the interim director since July 2019.[2]

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