This browser is not actively supported anymore. For the best passle experience, we strongly recommend you upgrade your browser.
Insights Insights
| 1 minute read

FTC and HHS Issue Joint Warning to Health Organizations About Privacy Risks From Social Media Trackers

In a recent development aimed at safeguarding consumers' health privacy, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Office for Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) have jointly sent a letter to approximately 130 hospital systems and telehealth providers. This letter alerts these organizations about the potential risks and concerns associated with integrating technologies into their websites and mobile apps that can track users' online activities and potentially disclose personal health data to third parties. (Examples would include the Meta and Google pixels, and similar trackers that may be embedded when a provider uses their services or provides social media links.) The letter is the latest move in the health privacy space by federal regulators, who have brought health privacy enforcement actions and sent other warnings out over the last year.  

Why It Matters 

As privacy regulators in the United States have increased their enforcement efforts over the past year, health organizations must exercise extra caution when adding social media features or services to their sites. It is especially important for healthcare providers to pay attention to tracking technologies that social media services may place on users of healthcare apps and sites. These technologies can collect and transfer personal health data, potentially violating privacy regulations and compromising users' confidential information.

In the latest move by the FTC and HHS' Office for Civil Rights to clamp down on practices that could put consumers' sensitive health information at risk, the agencies sent a joint letter to approximately 130 hospital systems and telehealth providers to alert them about "the risks and concerns" of integrating technologies into their websites and mobile apps that can track users' online activities and may impermissibly disclose consumers' personal health data to third parties.

Tags

data security and privacy, hill_mitzi, insights, health care