Comment Period on Proposed HIPAA Privacy Rule Changes Extended by 45 Days
Changes to the HIPAA Rules are infrequent, so when updates are proposed they tend to include a slew of new requirements and updates to existing provisions. Before any updates are made, a request for information (RFI) is issued to allow the HHS to obtain feedback on aspects of the HIPAA Rules that are causing problems, and areas where improvements could be made. Following the RFI, a notice of proposed rulemaking is issued by the HHS followed by a comment period. The comment period is the last chance for industry stakeholder, including patients and their families, to voice their opinions about the proposed changes before they are signed into law. After issuing an RFI, the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on December 10, 2020, along with the standard 60-day comment period from the date of publication in the Federal Register (January 21, 2021). The comment period was due to expire on March 22, 2021. Since the proposed changes include updates to the HIPAA Privacy Rule that will impact virtually everyone in the healthcare industry, the HHS has taken...
FTC Urged to Enforce Breach Notification Rule When Fertility Tracking Apps Share User Data Without Consent
On March 4, 2021, Senator Robert Menendez (D-New Jersey), and Reps. Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-New Jersey) and Mikie Sherrill (D-New Jersey) wrote a letter urging the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to start enforcing the Health Breach Notification Rule. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has a mandate to protect Americans from bad actors that betray consumer trust and misuse consumers’ healthcare data and has the authority to take enforcement action but is not enforcing compliance with the Health Breach Notification Rule. The Health Breach Notification Rule was introduced as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and requires vendors of personal health records, PHR related entities, and third-party service providers to inform consumers about unauthorized disclosures of personal health information. The Health Breach Notification Rule applies to entities not covered by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), and has similar provisions to the HIPAA Breach Notification Rule. While the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights has enforced compliance with...
Arizona High Court Revives Privacy Lawsuit Stemming from Pharmacy ED Medication Disclosure
This week, the Arizona Supreme Court revived a HIPAA violation lawsuit filed by a Phoenix man over a privacy violation by a pharmacy employee related to an erectile dysfunction medication prescription. Greg Shepherd, 50, had visited his doctor for a routine medical appointment in January 2016 and his doctor provided him with a erectile dysfunction medication sample. He received a call from the Costco pharmacy later and was told that the full prescription for the ED medication was available to collect. Shepherd explained that he did not want the medication and cancelled the prescription. Shepherd called the pharmacy a month later to check whether an unrelated prescription was ready to collect, and the pharmacy informed again him that his ED prescription was still waiting to be collected. Shepherd declined the medication a second time and told the pharmacy to cancel the prescription for the second time. Shepherd, who had been trying to reconcile with his ex-wife, authorized her to collect an unrelated, regular prescription refill from the pharmacy. When she visited the pharmacy, the...
Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act Signed into Law
The Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act (CDPA) has been signed into law by Governor Ralph Northam. CDPA requires persons conducting business in the Commonwealth of Virginia to comply with new data privacy and security requirements. The CDPA takes effect on January 1, 2023. The CDPA mirrors some of the privacy and security provisions of the EUs General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) that took effect on March 25, 2018, and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) that took effect on January 1, 2020. While there are similarities with the GDPR and the CCPA, there are some differences, so compliance with either the CCPA or the GDPR does not guarantee compliance with the CDPA. Like the CCPA, the CDPA only applies to organizations that control or process significant amounts of consumer data, with the data threshold twice as high as the CCPA, although there is no minimum revenue threshold in the CDPA. The CDPA applies to any person or business that: Controls or processes the personal data of 100,000 or more Virginia residents in a calendar year; or Controls or processes the data of...
Two Employees Fired for Impermissible PHI Disclosures to Third Parties
Humana has discovered an employee of a subcontractor of a business associate impermissibly disclosed the protected health information of 62,950 of its members to a third-party for training purposes. Cotiviti was contracted by Humana to provide assistance requesting medical records and used a subcontractor to review the requested medical records. Under HIPAA, subcontractors used by business associates are also required to comply with HIPAA. The privacy violations occurred between October 12, 2020 and December 16, 2020 and Cotiviti notified Humana about the HIPAA violation on December 22, 2020. Cotiviti has worked with Humana to ensure that safeguards are implemented to prevent similar privacy breaches in the future, and that those safeguards are put in place at any subcontractors it uses. The individual who disclosed the data is no longer employed by the subcontractor. The types of data disclosed includes member names’, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, dates of birth, full or partial Social Security Numbers, insurance identification numbers, provider names, dates of...



