Novant Health has recently notified patients about a breach of their protected health information due to the incorrect configuration of Meta Pixel code on its patient portal.
Code Snippet Sending Sensitive Patient Data to Meta
Earlier this year, an investigation conducted by The Markup into the use of Meta Pixel code on healthcare providers’ websites revealed 33 of the top 100 hospitals in the United States had included Meta Pixel code on their websites, and 7 of those hospitals had added the code to their password-protected patient portals. The 7 hospitals discovered by The Markup to have installed Meta Pixel on their patient portals were Community Health Network, FastMed, Edward-Elmhurst Health, Piedmont, Renown Health, WakeMed, and Novant Health.
Meta Pixel is a snippet of JavaScript code that is used to track website visitors, and the information gathered is sent to Meta (Facebook), which may be used to serve targeted ads. Meta claims that organizations that use Meta Pixel are not supposed to send sensitive data. If Meta discovers it has been sent sensitive data by mistake, it is filtered out to prevent the information from being used to serve targeted ads. That process does not appear to be working, and even if that information is filtered out, it is still being sent to Meta.
In the weeks following the publication of the report, multiple lawsuits were filed on behalf of individuals whose personal and protected health information was disclosed to Meta via Meta Pixel code on healthcare provider websites. The lawsuits allege violations of federal and state privacy laws as the information was sent without obtaining express consent from patients.
A class action lawsuit was filed on behalf of a patient of Baltimore-based MedStar Health System, which alleges Meta Pixel has been used on the websites of at least 664 healthcare providers, allowing patient data to be sent to Meta in violation of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). Another lawsuit was filed against Meta and the University of California San Francisco and Dignity Health, with the lead plaintiff claiming to have been served targeted adverts following the disclosure of sensitive information about a health issue on the patient portal. Most recently, a similar lawsuit was filed against Meta and Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, IL.
Novant Health Notifies Patients About Meta Pixel Data Breach
Novant Health has recently notified an as-of-yet unspecified number of patients that some of their protected health information (PHI) has been sent to Meta. As far as HIPAA Journal has been able to establish, Novant Health is the first healthcare provider to issue breach notification letters to patients over the use of Meta Pixel code.
Novant Health explained in the breach notification letters that PHI was transferred to Meta due to “an incorrect configuration of [Meta] Pixel, an online tracking tool.” Novant Health said it wanted to be fully transparent over the data breach and the reasons for using the pixel code on its website.
“In May 2020, as our nation confronted the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Novant Health launched a promotional campaign to connect more patients to the Novant Health MyChart patient portal, with the goals of improving access to care through virtual visits and to provide increased accessibility to counter the limitations of in-person care,” explained Novant Health. “This campaign involved Facebook advertisements and a Meta (Facebook parent company) tracking pixel placed on the Novant Health website to help understand the success of those advertisement efforts on Facebook; however, the pixel was configured incorrectly and may have allowed certain private information to be transmitted to Meta from the Novant Health website and MyChart portal.”
When notified about the potential privacy violation, Novant Health immediately disabled and removed the pixel from the patient portal and launched an investigation to determine the extent to which information was being transferred to Meta. On June 17, 2022, Novant Health determined that PHI may have been inadvertently transferred based on the type of user activity on the patient portal. The information transferred would have varied from patient to patient, and may have included an individual’s email address, phone number, IP address, contact information entered into Emergency Contacts or Advanced Care Planning, appointment type and date, physician selected, button/menu selections, and/or content typed into free text boxes.
Novant Health said it has found no evidence that Meta or any other third party has acted upon the information provided. If an individual entered financial information or a Social Security number in free text boxes, that information may also have been sent to Meta. Novant Health said the individual notification letters would state if such information had been disclosed, and if so, complimentary credit monitoring services will be provided to affected individuals.
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