Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Lawsuit Claims Facebook Is Gaining Access To Some Patients' Health Data
Meta Platforms Inc. was sued over claims that private medical data is being shared secretly with Facebook when patients access web portals for some health-care providers. Facebook鈥檚 Pixel tracking tool redirects patient communications and other supposedly 鈥渟ecure鈥 information without authorization and in violation of federal and state laws, according to the lawsuit filed Friday in San Francisco federal court as a proposed class action on behalf of millions of patients. (Peng, 6/17)
A tracking tool installed on many hospitals鈥 websites has been collecting patients鈥 sensitive health information 鈥 including details about their medical conditions, prescriptions, and doctor鈥檚 appointments 鈥 and sending it to Facebook. The Markup tested the websites of Newsweek鈥檚 top 100 hospitals in America. On 33 of them we found the tracker, called the Meta Pixel, sending Facebook a packet of data whenever a person clicked a button to schedule a doctor鈥檚 appointment. The data is connected to an IP address 鈥 an identifier that鈥檚 like a computer鈥檚 mailing address and can generally be linked to a specific individual or household 鈥 creating an intimate receipt of the appointment request for Facebook. (Feathers, Fondrie-Teitler, Waller and Mattu, 6/16)
Shareholders have hit digital health companies with a spate of securities fraud lawsuits this year as once high-flying companies see share prices drop, and more could be on the horizon. It's common to see a rise in such complaints, across industries, when the stock market is down. But healthcare and life sciences companies may be more susceptible to litigation. "In the life sciences and healthcare areas, you have a lot of companies whose stock prices are volatile," said Jason Vigna, a litigator at law firm Mintz, who's defended companies in shareholder disputes. "Because of that, unfortunately, they get hit by these cases a little bit more." (Kim Cohen, 6/20)
On medical debt 鈥
KHN: Medical Bills Can Shatter Lives. North Carolina May Act To 鈥楧e-Weaponize鈥 That Debt
When Erin Williams-Reavis faced a $3,500 surgery bill, the hospital offered to let her pay in $300 monthly installments. It was too much, said Williams-Reavis, 44, who lives in Greensboro, about an hour west of the state capital. Her hours as a personal assistant had been cut, and she and her husband were behind on bills, even requesting a forbearance on their mortgage. In Charlotte, Patrick Oliver was stunned to receive a nearly $30,000 bill after a trip to the emergency room for numbness and burning in his hands and feet. When Oliver, 66, and his wife, Mary, couldn鈥檛 pay, the hospital sued them. The couple feared they鈥檇 lose their home. (Pattani, 6/21)
KHN: Journalists Dig Deep On Medical Debt And The Boundaries Of AI In Health Care聽
KHN senior correspondent Noam N. Levey discussed America鈥檚 medical debt crisis on NPR鈥檚 鈥淢orning Edition鈥 on June 16. ... KHN Editor-in-Chief Elisabeth Rosenthal discussed whether the government is equipped to regulate the use of artificial intelligence in health care on WBUR鈥檚 鈥淥n Point鈥 on June 10. (6/18)
KHN: Watch: Still Paying Off Bills From Twins鈥 Birth. The Kids Are 10 Now
Marcus and Allyson Ward carefully planned their finances before having children 鈥 but they owed $80,000 after their twins were born prematurely. Years later, after exhausting savings and retirement accounts, they are still paying off that debt. The family is among 100 million people in America systematically pushed into medical debt, according to an investigation by KHN and NPR. CBS consumer investigative correspondent Anna Werner interviewed the Wards for 鈥淐BS Mornings.鈥 (6/17)