Dr. Robert Redfield, head of the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Alex Azar, secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Human Services, have been subpoenaed to produce “full and unredacted” documents on alleged political interference at the CDC.

The subpoenas were issued by the U.S. House subcommittee on the coronavirus crisis.

Redfield and Azar have been ordered to produce the documents within the next 10 days.

On Monday, the House panel accused the White House political appointees of attempting to block or change more than a dozen government reports that detailed scientific findings about the spread of the coronavirus.

U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, D-South Carolina, said his coronavirus committee investigators have found evidence of a “political pressure campaign” to “bully” CDC professionals in what may have been an attempt to “cripple the nation’s coronavirus response in a misguided effort to achieve herd immunity.”

The committee’s findings so far were detailed in a 20-page letter to Azar and Redfield that centered on the actions of two political appointees earlier this year at HHS. New York political operative and Trump loyalist Michael Caputo was installed as the department’s top spokesman during a period of high tension between White House officials and Azar. Caputo brought health researcher Paul Alexander with him as an adviser. Both men have since left the agency.

But for months, the letter alleges, they waged a campaign to block or change articles on the COVID-19 pandemic in a CDC publication called the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, or MMWR, which is closely followed by the public health community.

With Alexander taking the lead, investigators said the campaign:

» Sought to block or change more than a dozen MMWR articles, sometimes succeeding in getting changes to draft language and at other times delaying publication as internal arguments raged.

» Intensely challenged articles that detailed scientific findings on the spread of COVID-19 among children. This came when President Donald Trump was adamantly urging a return to in-person schooling in the fall. Those included reports about outbreaks in summer camps, data on hospitalization rates among children and findings about a dangerous condition called “multi-inflammatory syndrome,” which afflicts some children who get sick from the coronavirus.

» Attacked a draft MMWR article showing a jump in prescriptions for hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug that Trump embraced early on as a “game changer” only to ultimately learn it could do more harm than good. HHS even went so far as to draft an op-ed rebutting the CDC article, although it was never published. The op-ed accused the MMWR authors of trying to grab headlines, calling them a “disgrace to public service.”

While some HHS career officials apparently tried to defuse Alexander’s criticism by making changes in wording or headlines of MMWR articles, at least one confronted the pressure tactics.

Bill Hall, a senior career spokesman, wrote to Caputo and Alexander to explain that the CDC’s publication was akin to a peer-reviewed scientific journal and that HHS historically had respected its independence. The HHS public affairs office that Caputo once headed “is not a science or medical program office,” wrote Hall. “As a matter of longstanding policy, we do not engage in clearing scientific articles, as that arena needs to remain an independent process.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.