MedData Settles Class Action Data Breach Lawsuit for $7 Million
Last month, the Spring, TX-based revenue cycle management firm MedData agreed to a $7 million settlement to resolve a class action lawsuit filed following the exposure of the personal and health information of 136,000 individuals on a public-facing website. MedData helps healthcare providers and health plans by processing Medicaid eligibility, third-party liability, workers’ compensation, and patient billing, including healthcare providers and health plans such as Memorial Hermann, Aspirus Health Plan, OSF HealthCare, and the University of Chicago Medical Center. All of those HIPAA-covered entities had member and patient data exposed by MedData. Between December 2018 and September 2019, a MedData employee inadvertently uploaded the data to personal folders on GitHub Arctic Code Vault, which is a public-facing part of the GitHub website. The data remained there unprotected and exposed for more than a year. MedData was informed about the data exposure by a security researcher on December 10, 2020, and the files were removed from GitHub on December 17, 2020. MedData has faced 5 class...
FTC Prohibits Alcohol Addiction Firm from Sharing Consumer Data with Third Parties
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has ordered the alcohol addiction treatment firm Monument to stop disclosing consumers’ health data to third parties for advertising purposes without obtaining affirmative consent. A $2.5 million civil monetary penalty has also been imposed but the penalty has been suspended due to the inability of Monument to pay. The FTC’s proposed order settles FTC charges that Monument disclosed consumers’ personal and health information to third parties such as Google and Meta between 2020 and 2022 without obtaining consent. The data disclosed revealed that customers were receiving help with alcohol addiction when Monument had informed its customers that their data would remain 100% confidential. When customers sign up for Monument’s services, they disclose sensitive information including their name, email address, date of birth, phone number, address, information about their alcohol consumption, medical history, copies of their government-issued IDs, and their IP address and device IDs are collected. According to the complaint, between 2020 and 2022,...
96% of Hospitals Still Use Website Tracking Technologies That Share Data with Third Parties
An analysis of the websites of non-federal acute care U.S. hospitals has confirmed that 96% of those websites use tracking technologies that share visitor data with third parties such as Meta, Google, LinkedIn, or Snapchat. In December 2022, The Department of Health and Human Services issued guidance for HIPAA-regulated entities on the use of website tracking technologies. The guidance made it clear that under HIPAA, these technologies cannot be used if they share protected health information with third parties unless the third parties in question are authorized to receive the data – and a HIPAA-compliant business associate agreement is in place – or if consent to share the data is obtained from patients. In July 2023, OCR and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) issued around 130 warning letters to hospitals and telehealth companies to remind them of their obligations under HIPAA with respect to website tracking technologies. OCR issued updated guidance in March 2024 clarifying its position, confirming that OCR accepts that not all information collected through these tools is...
Epic Systems Shuts off Access for Certain Particle Health Customers Over Patient Privacy Concerns
The electronic health record provider Epic Systems has cut off access to data for a startup called Particle Health after alleging the firm was sharing patient data with third-party companies for reasons not related to treatment. Epic, the largest provider of electronic health records in the United States, alleged that Particle Health was engaging in unauthorized and unethical data sharing that had the potential to violate the HIPAA Privacy Rule. On Thursday last week, Epic notified customers that the connection with Particle Health had been cut off. Particle Health is a member of the Carequality network, which supports interoperability and facilitates health data exchange. Members of the network act as middlemen that connect different healthcare networks across the United States and the Carequality interoperability framework is used to exchange more than 400 million documents each month. To join the Carequality network, a company must agree to only share patient data for certain purposes, one of which is for treatment. Epic responds to requests for data for treatment purposes and...
FTC Fines Mental Health Company Cerebral $7.1 Million for Consumer Privacy Violations
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has fined the mental health startup Cerebral $7.1 million for consumer privacy violations and deceptive trading practices. The $7.1 million financial penalty resolves allegations that the mental health telehealth company and its former CEO, Kyle Robertson, broke its privacy promise to consumers by impermissibly disclosing their sensitive personal and health information to third parties for advertising purposes, misled consumers about its cancellation process, and failed to protect sensitive health data. The proposed FTC order includes a requirement for Cerebral to refrain from disclosing consumers’ data to third parties for advertising purposes without consent and for the company to provide an easy way for consumers to cancel its services. One of the most important factors for consumers when choosing a mental health care provider is privacy. Consumers need to be able to discreetly discuss highly sensitive mental health problems and be sure that the information disclosed is kept private and confidential. The FTC alleged that Cerebral claimed...



