Reed Smith In-depth

Key takeaways

  • Several states have proposed bills, enacted health data privacy laws, or amended existing privacy laws to protect “consumer health data” (a term that encompasses more than businesses and individuals might expect); the laws broadly apply to many types of businesses that would not normally be expected to have obligations under a health-related law.
  • Some characteristics of these new state health privacy laws raise interesting questions and could create difficult compliance obligations, including around “right to delete,” consent/authorization to sell consumer health data, geofencing prohibition, and data inferred from non-health-related data.
  • Businesses need to familiarize themselves with these new laws – and keep an eye on additional state privacy laws being proposed, enacted, or revised – and continue updating their privacy compliance programs to incorporate new obligations.

In the aftermath of the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Supreme Court decision, three states have enacted health data privacy laws or amended existing privacy laws, and other states have proposed bills, to protect consumer health data that may not be regulated by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and its implementing regulations (collectively, HIPAA). One additional state has enacted restrictions on geofencing that relate to consumer health data. These new laws, with various effective dates, present novel considerations and compliance challenges for businesses that collect, use, and disclose “consumer health data” – a term that encompasses more than businesses and individuals might expect. In addition to the potentially expansive definition of “consumer health data,” the laws broadly apply to many types of businesses that would not normally be expected to have obligations under health-related laws.

Washington and Nevada do not have comprehensive consumer privacy laws like those recently enacted by several other states. So the new health data privacy laws in Washington (My Health My Data Act) and Nevada (Senate Bill No. 370) are the first significant state privacy laws in those states. They include many of the same privacy-related rights and obligations created by the comprehensive consumer privacy laws in other states narrowed to apply only to consumer health data. Washington’s new law applies to most businesses beginning March 31, 2024 (certain small businesses do not need to comply until June 30, 2024), with a prohibition related to geofencing that went into effect on July 23, 2023. Nevada’s new law also goes into effect March 31, 2024.