Friday, August 25, 2017

🏳️‍🌈✝️ Aetna Mailed Envelopes Revealing HIV Info to 12,000 Clients

A sample Aetna envelope Courtesy of AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania and the Legal Action Center

The insurer’s privacy violation “creates a tangible risk of violence, discrimination and other trauma.”
August 25, 2017


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Nearly 12,000 people taking HIV meds received a letter from insurer Aetna Inc. in which information about their prescriptions was visible in the envelope’s window, Bloomberg reports. Specifically, the beginning of the letter informing patients about options for filling their HIV meds could be seen. Some recipients are HIV positive; others are taking the HIV prevention pill Truvada as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).

“Aetna’s privacy violation devastated people whose neighbors and family learned their intimate health information. They also were shocked that their health insurer would utterly disregard their privacy rights,” said Sally Friedman, legal director of the Legal Action Center in New York City, in a press release. She is working with Ronda B. Goldfein, executive director of the AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania, in calling for an end to the letters in the current form and for Aetna to develop a plan to correct its practices and procedures.

The two lawyers sent a letter to Aetna that begins, in part: We are writing “on behalf of individuals in Arizona, California, Georgia, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Washington, DC, to demand that Aetna immediately cease and desist from breaching their privacy by sending mail that illegally discloses that they are taking HIV medication. We also are demanding that Aetna take corrective measures to ensure that this gross breach of privacy and confidentiality never reoccurs.”

People taking HIV meds can face serious issues of stigma, Goldfein noted, adding that a violation of that privacy “creates a tangible risk of violence, discrimination and other trauma.”
Aetna sent a letter to its customers notifying them of the breach and apologizing, according to Bloomberg. “This type of mistake is unacceptable,” Aetna said. “We sincerely apologize to those affected by a mailing issue that inadvertently exposed the personal health information of some Aetna members.”

Read more articles from POZ, here.
  

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