OPINION OF THE COURT
In this neglect proceeding, initiated pursuant to article 10 of the Family Court Act, the Beth Israel Medical Center (Medical Center) moves to quash a subpoena, served upon it by the petitioner herein, for “all records of [its] contact with either or both respondents” in this proceeding. The Medical Center argues that in the absence of a court order issued for good cause shown, disclosure of its records is prohibited under section 1175 of title 21 of the United States Code and the regulations promulgated thereunder.
In Commissioner of Social Servs. of City of N. Y. v David R. S., 55 NY2d 588), the Court of Appeals identified the injury to the patient’s treatment services resulting from disclosure of such records as the deterrence of the patient in question, as well as of other present and potential patients, from participation in treatment services due to fear, prompted by knowledge of record disclosures, that confidentiality will not be available to them at those treatment facilities and that the assurances given them are not to be relied upon. While there is no evidence in this case that respondents are currently in a drug treatment program and thus it does not appear that disclosure would harm a physician-patient relationship or result in respondents’ termination of treatment services, the impact on other present patients as well as all potential future patients must be given substantial weight. (See Commissioner of Social Servs. of City of N. Y. v David R. S., supra; Congressional Conference Report, HR Report No. 92-920, 92d Cong, 2d Session, p 33 [in US Code Cong & Admin News, 1972, p 2072].)*
Prior courts which have been called upon to apply the Federal statute in child protective proceedings have held that where the information is material and its disclosure is necessary to establish an allegation of neglect or abuse, the public interest in protecting children from mistreatment and in safeguarding their well-being outweighs the interest in protecting from injury the patient, the physician-patient relationship and the treatment services. (Matter of Doe Children, 93 Misc 2d 479; Matter of Baby X., 97 Mich App 111; cf. Matter of Dwayne G., 97 Misc 2d 333 [applying a virtually identical Federal statute which protects the confidentiality of alcohol abuse records].)
This court agrees with that conclusion. However, in view of the high priority assigned to the maintenance of the confidentiality of drug treatment program records it is incumbent upon the court to scrutinize the extent of petitioner’s need for the records.
Of the. four allegations of neglect in the instant petition, the one to which the records in issue would be most relevant is that “[t]he mother is unable to adequately care for the child due to her misuse of drugs.” Petitioner argues on this motion that proof that the respondents are or were in a methadone program “will help” in proving they are or were drug addicts. Since there is no allegation in the petition that the child is neglected due to the father’s drug
The records in issue do not cover any period of time subsequent to the birth of the child who is the subject of this proceeding, and there is testimony by the child’s paternal grandmother that the respondent mother once admitted to her that she was in a methadone program. Further, there is evidence that the respondent mother admitted to the child care agency caseworker that she was mainlining by the age of 18 and there is a finding by a Family Court Judge at a foster care review proceeding on October 2, 1981, concerning a sibling of the child in this proceeding that there was evidence of drug addiction by the respondent mother. Additionally* a social worker at Mary Immaculate Hospital testified without objection that the respondent father told her that the mother had been on drugs and in many drug rehabilitation programs.
Thus, it is evident that the records in question, even if they were to show that the mother had been in a methadone treatment program for drug addiction at the Medical Center, would be merely cumulative. Where drug treatment program records would be cumulative only, it has been held that they will not be ordered disclosed. (Commissioner of Social Servs. of City of N. Y. v David R. S., 55 NY2d 588, supra.) This is true, where they are sought for the purpose of impeaching a witness’ credibility and the fact of drug use has already been disclosed (United States v Graham, 548 F2d 1302) and where such records would be more probative than the evidence of the same facts already adduced (Commissioner of Social Servs. of City of N. Y. v David R. S., supra). Therefore, since the records would not be probative of drug use subsequent to the birth of the child and would be merely cumulative on the issue of drug use prior to the child’s birth, the court will not order them produced for use in establishing the allegation of drug misuse.
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The Congressional Conference Report, issued in connection with the Federal legislation states: “The conferees wish to stress their conviction that the strictest adherence to the provisions of this section is absolutely essential to the success of all