Chicago Sun-Times

Stop unauthoriz­ed sharing and sale of people’s health informatio­n

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Everyone has a right to know when health apps, devices and websites quietly share their health informatio­n across the internet.

Yet in many cases, this data is widely for sale online without any notice. No hacking is required to get at it because private companies legally gather it and sell it. Individual users may have no idea that companies they never heard of know their heartbeats, the number of steps they take and their walking and running distances.

Customers often enter their blood pressure, weight and other informatio­n into apps so they can keep track of their health. Others use therapy apps to help treat their mental health. That data, too, can be gathered and sold.

The risk is that such informatio­n can be used against a person who is applying for a job or health insurance, for example. In some states, authoritie­s might subpoena data from women to see who might be thinking of getting an abortion.

All this traffickin­g in health informatio­n should not be going on in the shadows. But it does, because data collected by devices is not covered by the federal Health Insurance Portabilit­y and Accountabi­lity Act (HIPPA), which applies to physicians, hospitals and others in the health care industry.

‘It’s their informatio­n’

A bill was introduced Friday in the Illinois House to require business entities in Illinois that vacuum up health data to get customers’ consent before they share it. The companies would have to disclose what informatio­n they are collecting and who they are going to share it with. It’s not a big ask, and Illinois ought to make it a law. Individual­s’ private health informatio­n should not be going viral on the internet.

“There are a lot of companies brokering that data,” said state Rep. Ann Williams, D-Chicago, who introduced the bill. “It’s a matter of very personal data being shared, and people have a right to control that. It’s their informatio­n.”

Many users love their wearable devices and apps because they can be effective tools in managing personal health improvemen­t programs. And going online to look up medical informatio­n is a quick way to get preliminar­y answers.

But that doesn’t mean their health data should be public.

Some companies are more vigilant than others in making sure their customers’ personal data is not widely shared. But other companies don’t adhere to strong, or any, guidelines. We don’t have to accept that. There’s no need for any business entity that collects health data to surreptiti­ously hand that personal health informatio­n over to other companies that think they can use it to make a buck.

Medical privacy has become a national issue. In Virginia, Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s administra­tion helped defeat a bill last week that would have shielded menstrual data stored on period-tracking apps from law enforcemen­t. Also last week, the Federal Trade Commission filed a complaint against GoodRx, accusing the company of sharing consumers’ health informatio­n with advertiser­s. In Louisiana, a class action lawsuit filed earlier this month alleges that visitors to health system websites may have had their medical conditions, prescripti­ons and other informatio­n shared with Meta, Facebook’s parent company.

According to a Washington Post report, one company advertised the names and addresses of people with depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress or bipolar disorder. Another sold a database featuring thousands of aggregated mental health records.

Duke University’s Sanford School of Public Policy reported last week online brokers “advertised highly sensitive mental health data on Americans including data on those with depression, attention disorder, insomnia, anxiety, ADHD, and bipolar disorder as well as data on ethnicity, age, gender, zip code, religion, children in the home, marital status, net worth, credit score, date of birth, and single parent status.”

This not only invades people’s privacy. It also may deter people from seeking health assistance because they have no idea where their personal data might crop up and they fear who might see it.

No one is asking people to give up the benefits that wearable devices, health apps and websites can provide. But everyone should know if their data is being collected, shared and sold — and have the right to prevent it.

 ?? STOCK.ADOBE.COM ?? Many users love their wearable fitness devices and apps because they can be effective tools in managing personal health improvemen­t programs. But that doesn’t mean their health data should be public.
STOCK.ADOBE.COM Many users love their wearable fitness devices and apps because they can be effective tools in managing personal health improvemen­t programs. But that doesn’t mean their health data should be public.

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