CVS
Caremark Settles FTC Charges:
Failed to Protect Medical and Financial Privacy of Customers and Employees;
CVS Pharmacy Also Pays $2.25 Million to Settle Allegations of HIPAA Violations
CVS Caremark has agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission
charges that it failed to take reasonable and appropriate security measures to
protect the sensitive financial and medical information of its customers and
employees, in violation of federal law. In a separate but related agreement, the
company’s pharmacy chain also has agreed to pay $2.25 million to resolve
Department of Health and Human Services allegations that it violated the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
"This is a case that will restore appropriate privacy
protections to tens of millions of people across the country," said
William E. Kovacic, Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. "It also
sends a strong message to other organizations that possess consumers' protected
personal information. They are required to secure consumers' private
information."
CVS Caremark operates the largest pharmacy chain in the
United States, with more than 6,300 retail outlets and online and mail-order
pharmacy businesses.
The FTC opened its investigation into CVS Caremark following
media reports from around the country that its pharmacies were throwing trash
into open dumpsters that contained pill bottles with patient names, addresses,
prescribing physicians’ names, medication and dosages; medication instruction
sheets with personal information; computer order information from the
pharmacies, including consumers’ personal information; employment applications,
including social security numbers; payroll information; and credit card and
insurance card information, including, in some cases, account numbers and
driver’s license numbers. At the same time, HHS opened its investigation into
the pharmacies’ disposal of health information protected by HIPAA. The FTC and
HHS coordinated their investigations and settlements.
The FTC’s complaint charges that CVS Caremark failed to
implement reasonable and appropriate procedures for handling personal
information about customers and employees, in violation of federal laws. In
particular, according to the complaint, CVS Caremark did not implement
reasonable policies and procedures to dispose securely of personal information,
did not adequately train employees, did not use reasonable measures to assess
compliance with its policies and procedures for disposing of personal
information, and did not employ a reasonable process for discovering and
remedying risks to personal information.
CVS Caremark made claims such as “CVS/pharmacy wants you to
know that nothing is more central to our operations than maintaining the
privacy of your health information.” The FTC alleged that the claim was
deceptive and that CVS Caremark’s security practices also were unfair. Unfair
and deceptive practices violate the FTC Act.
The FTC order requires CVS Caremark to establish, implement,
and maintain a comprehensive information security program designed to protect
the security, confidentiality, and integrity of the personal information it
collects from consumers and employees. It also requires the company to obtain,
every two years for the next 20 years, an audit from a qualified, independent,
third-party professional to ensure that its security program meets the
standards of the order. CVS Caremark will be subject to standard record-keeping
and reporting provisions to allow the FTC to monitor compliance. Finally, the
settlement bars future misrepresentations of the company’s security practices.
The HHS settlement requires CVS pharmacies to establish and
implement policies and procedures for disposing of protected health
information, implement a training program for handling and disposing of such
patient information, conduct internal monitoring, and engage an outside
independent assessor to evaluate compliance for three years. CVS also will pay
HHS $2.25 million to settle the matter
http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2009pres/02/20090218a.html.
The Commission vote to accept the proposed consent agreement
was 4-0. The FTC will publish an announcement regarding the agreement in the
Federal Register shortly. The agreement will be subject to public comment for
30 days, beginning today and continuing through March 20, 2009, after which the
Commission will decide whether to make it final. Comments should be addressed
to the FTC, Office of the Secretary, Room H-135, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, DC 20580. The FTC is requesting that any comment filed in paper
form near the end of the public comment period be sent by courier or overnight
service, if possible, because U.S. postal mail in the Washington area and at
the Commission is subject to delay due to heightened security precautions.