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If you look at the apps on your phone, chances are you have at least one related to your health—and probably several. Whether it is a mental health app, a fitness tracker, a connected health device or something else, many of us are taking advantage of this technology to keep better track of our health in some shape or form. Recent research from the Organization for the Review of Care and Health Applications found that 350,000 health apps were available on the market, 90,000 of which launched in 2020 alone.
While these apps have a great deal to offer, it is not always clear how the personal information we input is collected, safeguarded and shared online. Existing health privacy law, such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, is primarily focused on the way hospitals, doctors’ offices, clinics and insurance companies store health records online. The health information these apps and health data tracking wearables are collecting typically does not receive the same legal protections.
Without additional protections in place, companies may share (and potentially monetize) personal health information in a way consumers may not have authorized or anticipated. In 2021, Flo Health faced a Federal Trade Commission(FTC) investigation. The FTC alleged in a complaint that "despite express privacy claims, the company took control of users' sensitivity fertility data and shared it with third parties.” Flo Health and the FTC settled the matter with a Consent Order requiring the company to get app users' express affirmative consent before sharing their health information as well as to instruct the third parties to delete the data they had obtained.
Section 5 of the FTC Act empowers the FTC to initiate enforcement action against unfair or deceptive acts, meaning the FTC can only act after the fact if a company's privacy practices are misleading or cause unjustified consumer harm. While the FTC is doing what it can to ensure apps are keeping their promises to consumers around the handling of their sensitive health information, the rate at which these health apps are hitting the market demonstrates just how immense of a challenge this is.
As to the prospects for federal legislation, commentators suggest that comprehensive federal privacy legislation seems unlikely in the short term. States have begun implementing their own solutions to shore up protections for consumer-generated health data. California has been at the forefront of state privacy efforts with the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018. Virginia,Colorado and Utah have also recently passed state consumer data privacy legislation.
1.

2.

3.Before sharing its users' health information, Flo Health is required to____.

4. What challenges is the FTC currently faced with?

5.

问题1选项
A.the prevalence of health apps
B.暂无
C.暂无
D.暂无
问题2选项
A.Its coverage needs to be extended.
B.Its enforcement needs strenthening.
C.暂无
D.暂无Before sharing its users' health information, Flo Health is required to____.
问题3选项
A.seek the approval of the FTC
B.find qualified third parties
C.remove irrelevant personal data
D.obtain their explicit permission
问题4选项
A.The complexity of health information.
B.The rapid increase in new health apps.
C.The subtle deceptiveness of health apps.
D.The difficulty in assessing consumer harm
问题5选项
A.暂无
B.暂无
C.暂无
D.has gained legislative support in some states
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